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Singapore Government Firm Pursues Buyout of Olam International

HONG KONG â€" Olam International, a Singapore agricultural commodities company that has been targeted by the short seller Carson C. Block, said on Friday that it had received a cash buyout offer led by a Singapore government investment firm valuing it at more than $4 billion.

Temasek Holdings, the Singapore government investor, is leading a consortium of investors that already controls 52.5 percent of Olam. The buyout group is offering to pay 2.23 Singapore dollars, or $1.76, for each share they do not already own â€" a premium of about 12 percent to where the stock last traded.

The deal values Olam at 5.3 billion dollars and the buyout consortium, which in addition to Temasek included a group of Olam’s founding shareholders and senior management, will have to pay 2.5 billion dollars for the shares they do not already own.

In late 2012, Mr. Block’s firm, Muddy Waters Research, placed a bet that Olam’s shares would fall and launched a high-profile attack on the Singapore firm, likening it to Enron and saying it was at risk of collapsing.

Olam mounted a vocal defense of itself and its accounting measures, which Mr. Block had targeted, and responded by suing the short seller in the Singaporean courts. The suit was later withdrawn.

Olam’s shares rose only slightly after Temasek’s offer was announced Friday and were trading at about 2 dollars apiece. That was near their highest level in a year, and more than 10 percent above where Olam’s shares were trading in November 2012, when Mr. Block announced his bet against the stock.

David Heng, a director of the Temasek unit leading the buyout bid, said that, if successful, they intend to maintain Olam’s Singapore listing. The bidders “share a common investment philosophy to invest and build for the long term,” Mr. Heng said.

“We believe a successful offer will provide Olam with a stronger and more stable shareholder base to support Olam’s strategy and business model,” he added.



Liberty Abandons Plan to Buy Rest of Sirius

Liberty Media, the company controlled by John C. Malone, announced late Thursday that it had abandoned its plan to buy the shares of SiriusXM that it did not already own as part of a move to set up two tracking stocks to house the company’s assets.

Liberty Media, which owns 53 percent of Sirius XM Holdings, had announced in January an all-stock deal valued at more than $10 billion to purchase the rest of the shares of Sirius.

One tracking stock group, to be called the Liberty Broadband Group, will include the company’s interest in Charter Communications; its interest in Time Warner Cable Inc. and its subsidiary TruePosition; and other investments. The second tracking stock, the Liberty Media Group, will encompass its other holding, including the Sirius XM stake as well as stakes in various media and entertainment businesses, including the Atlanta Braves baseball team, Live Nation Entertainment and Barnes & Noble.

In a statement, Mr. Malone said the move to set up the tracking stocks would help support its investment in Charter Communications.

“We remain very excited about our investments in the cable sector and Charter Communications,” Mr. Malone said. “We believe the creation of the Liberty Broadband tracking stock,” he added, “will provide us greater flexibility to, among other things, support Charter in its expansion efforts.”

Tracking stocks were popular in the late 1990s and early 2000s, particularly among media companies, to allow them to set up entities to “track” the financial performance of specific business units. If the unit or division does well, the value of the tracking stock typically increases, even if the company as a whole does poorly.

Under the plan, Liberty Media shareholders will receive one share of the corresponding series of Liberty Media tracking stock and four shares of the corresponding series of Liberty Broadband tracking stock for each share of common stock they own. They will also be offered the chance to buy additional shares in the tracking stocks.

Greg Maffei, Liberty Media’s chief executive, said in a statement the company planned to create the tracking stocks by the third quarter.

Liberty Media shares were up about 3 percent in after-hours trading on Thursday, while Sirius shares were down about 2 percent.



S.E.C. Brings Case Against 10th Former SAC Capital Employee

Federal regulators on Thursday announced the latest case to stem from the decade-long insider trading investigation into SAC Capital Advisors, taking aim at a former employee for facilitating a number of illegal trades.

Ronald N. Dennis is the 10th former employee of SAC Capital â€" the giant hedge fund run by the billionaire investor and art collector, Steven A. Cohen â€" to face insider trading charges. In settling the civil charges with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Mr. Dennis agreed to be banned from the securities industry and to pay $200,000.

The case against Mr. Dennis comes eight months after the investigation culminated with the indictment of SAC itself. After that move, a rare show of criminal force against a large company, the investigation into SAC and Mr. Cohen began to lose some momentum.

Mr. Dennis, who worked for less than two years at an arm of SAC known as CR Intrinsic before he left in 2010, was not charged criminally. In past court filings, prosecutors named him as an uncharged co-conspirator.

Some of his former SAC colleagues have faced worse fates. As SAC became synonymous with the broader insider trading investigation that consumed some of Wall Street’s biggest name hedge funds, eight current or former SAC employees have either pleaded guilty or been convicted.

“Like several others before him at SAC Capital and its affiliates, Dennis violated the insider trading laws when he exploited confidential information about public companies,” Sanjay Wadhwa, the S.E.C. official who oversaw the agency’s investigation into SAC, said in a statement. “His actions have cost him the privilege of working in the hedge fund industry ever again.”

A lawyer for Mr. Dennis and a spokesman for Mr. Cohen both declined to comment.

For years, Mr. Cohen was seen as the target of the investigation. Last year, the S.E.C. charged him with failing to supervise employees accused of insider trading. But as the cases piled up, Mr. Cohen was never charged with illegal trading himself. Federal prosecutors and the F.B.I. in Manhattan continue to pursue leads, though it its unclear whether any other criminal cases will surface.

After months of negotiating its own case, SAC agreed to plead guilty last year. The plea deal, which requires SAC to pay $1.2 billion to the government and shut its doors to outside investors, has not yet received court approval. Judge Laura Taylor Swain of Federal District Court in Manhattan is expected to rule at a hearing on April 10.

In the wake of the charges against his firm, Mr. Cohen kicked off a rebranding effort that would ultimately lead him to retire the SAC name. And now, the firm is completing the process of converting from a hedge fund to a family office that will manage mainly $9 billion of Mr. Cohen’s own money.

The firm, as part of that transition, announced this week that it would rename its flagship portfolio Point72 Asset Management. The new name is a reference to address for the firm’s Stamford, Conn. office located at 72 Cummings Point Road.

Mr. Cohen is hoping the new name and Judge Swain’s acceptance of the firm’s plea will bring to a close an investigation into accusations of insider trading that has dogged SAC for nearly 10 years.

For Mr. Dennis, who lives in Fort Worth, Texas, the S.E.C. case traced to confidential tips he received about a pair of technology companies. Mr. Dennis, who received the tips from friends at rival hedge funds, ultimately “prompted illegal trades” in the shares of Dell and Foundry. The trades, the S.E.C. said on Thursday, enabled SAC to generate more than $3 million in profits and avoided losses.

The Dell trades have long been at the center of the government’s case. The trades underpin the indictment of SAC and the charges against Michael Steinberg, the most senior SAC Capital employee to be convicted.

The tips came from Jesse Tortora, then an analyst with Diamondback Capital who has become a reoccurring figure in the insider trading investigation. Mr. Tortora â€" who is cooperating with the government and testified against Michael Steinberg â€" gleaned the inside information from another friend who was tied to a Dell insider.

Moments after one of the tidbits became public, Mr. Tortora sent an instant message to Mr. Dennis saying “your welcome.” In reply, Mr. Dennis remarked: “you da man!!! I owe you.”



In Snub to Loeb, Sotheby’s Board Nominates 2 Independent Directors


Sotheby’s, the auction house fending off attacks by the activist billionaire Daniel S. Loeb, dug in its heels on Thursday by rejecting his proposal for new board members and instead selected two others.

In an open letter to shareholders, Sotheby’s said it had carefully considered Mr. Loeb’s director nominations, but said his nominees â€" which include Mr. Loeb himself â€" “add no relevant expertise not already represented on the board of directors.”

The company announced that its nominees for two independent directors were Jessica Bibliowicz, a senior adviser to Bridge Growth Partners and the daughter of former Citigroup chief Sandy Weill; and Kevin C. Conroy, a senior executive at Univision Communications. They will replace two departing directors, Steve Dodge and Michael Sovern.

It is the latest turn in a high-profile battle for control of Sotheby’s, the oldest publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange. Last summer, Mr. Loeb’s hedge fund Third Point and another hedge fund, Marcato Capital, emerged as the biggest shareholders in the company and began to make calls for change with the business and its leadership.

In October, Mr. Loeb called for a makeover of the company, likening it to “an old painting in desperate need of restoration.” He has called on Sotheby’s chief executive, William Ruprecht, to step down, criticizing him for his multimillion-dollar pay packages and privileges that invoke “the long-gone era of imperial C.E.O.’s.”

At the same time, Mick McGuire of Marcato Capital called for a financial restructuring of the business and said Sotheby’s could produce $1.3 billion in cash if it sold some of its buildings, gave up its dealer operations and restructured its financing.

In a gesture to the two, the company pledged in January to return $450 million to shareholders through stock buybacks and special dividends, and announced plans to restructure some of its business units.

Mr. Loeb, who remained quiet for three months, returned to the fighting ring in February to mount a proxy battle. On Feb. 27, the investor disclosed in a regulatory filing that he sought three seats on the board of the auction house. His proposed slate included Harry Wilson, a restructuring expert and former Yahoo board member; and Oliver Reza, who is head of the Parisian jeweler House of Alexandre Reza.

“All shareholders will benefit from having an owner’s perspective in the boardroom,” Mr. Loeb said in the filing, referring to the fact that the current board members own less than 1 percent of the auction house’s shares.

But on Thursday, Sotheby’s said its board unanimously voted against Mr. Loeb’s recommendations and emphasized in a letter to its shareholders that its business was already competitive and focused on bringing them value.

“Indeed, under the leadership and guidance of your board of directors, Sotheby’s has delivered strong financial performance and superior shareholder returns, including a total shareholder return of 32.5 percent over the last year,” the letter stated.

A spokeswoman for Mr. Loeb declined to comment.



Charter Still Hanging Around Time Warner Cable


In early February, Comcast struck a deal to acquire Time Warner Cable for more than $45 billion, a move that will unite the two largest cable operators in the country if approved.

The deal came as a shock to most in the media industry, and especially to Charter Communications, the small cable operator that was waging its own takeover battle for Time Warner Cable. The agreement between Comcast and Time Warner Cable, it seemed, put a certain end to Charter’s plans.

Yet a full month after that deal was struck, Charter is still hanging around.

Most notably, Charter has not withdrawn the full slate of directors that it nominated to Time Warner Cable’s board just one day before Comcast swooped in.

Putting forward 13 directors to replace Time Warner Cable’s existing board was Charter’s boldest move to date, and paved the way for a nasty proxy fight.

But with Time Warner Cable shareholders appearing supportive of the Comcast offer, there is little chance that they will vote out the directors who approved that deal.

So why hasn’t Charter withdrawn its slate?

Charter says it is simply keeping its options open. After all, Time Warner Cable still hasn’t announced a date for its annual meeting, Charter notes, and the Comcast deal has yet to be approved by shareholders or regulators.

“There’s no rush in withdrawing it,” said Justin Venech, a company spokesman. “We’re going leave it there.”

It wasn’t the strongest slate to begin with, and did not include any close allies of John C. Malone, whose Liberty Media has a large stake in Charter. And Charter says it is not lobbying Time Warner Cable shareholders to vote for its preferred directors.

But by not withdrawing the slate, Charter has not entirely rolled over, either.

One theory for the lingering slate, advanced by rival investment banks, has to do with the league tables that rank corporate advisers. If the offer is fully withdrawn, rivals contend, Goldman Sachs, an adviser to Charter, could fall in the quarterly rankings.

However, in the last week alone, Goldman has advised on a number of big deals, including Chiquita’s $526 million deal for Fyffes, Safeway‘s $9 billion sale to Cerberus and the $1.8 billion sale of Jos. A. Bank to Men’s Wearhouse, suggesting that the bank will be well represented when the league tables are released in a ew weeks.

If Charter is hoping that Comcast’s stock collapses for some reason, giving it a chance to work its way back in, it may have to keep waiting. Though Comcast’s stock is off about 8 percent since the company announced its surprise deal, there is no indication that investors are losing faith in the deal for Time Warner Cable.

What’s more, Charter has reason to stay in the good graces of Comcast. It is a likely buyer for some of the three million subscribers that Comcast will sell off from Time Warner Cable as part of its efforts to appease antitrust regulators, and the company said it would also remain on the prowl for other deals.

“We are still interested in wisely acquiring subscribers through M.&A. when that opportunity arises,” Tom Rutledge, Charter’s chief executive, said shortly after the Comcast deal was announced. “If the landscape changes in such a way that we see opportunity, we will be opportunistic and take advantage of it.”

For now, it seems Charter is just not ready to let go. The company was never the most rational bidder for Time Warner Cable, chasing the stock price for months with a series of inadequate bids that ultimately left it outmaneuvered by Comcast.

And it seems that even in defeat, Charter is content to keep its rivals guessing.

“We’re not taking anything off the table,” Mr. Venech said. “We’re going to wait and see what happens.”



Moody’s Downgrades Royal Bank of Scotland Ratings

LONDON - The credit rating agency Moody’s Investors Service downgraded the Royal Bank of Scotland’s long-term debt ratings on Thursday.

The agency, a unit of Moody’s Corporation, placed R.B.S. on review last month after the British lender said it would set aside nearly 3 billion pounds, or about $5 billion, to cover potential litigation claims related to mortgage-backed securities and other products sold before the financial crisis.

Last month, the bank announced an £8.2 billion annual loss and said it could be three to five more years before it recovered. The lender is seeking to reshape itself into a customer-centric, British-focused bank after years of aggressive international ambitions.

On Thursday, Moody’s cut the bank holding company’s long-term credit rating a notch to Baa2, a medium-grade rating that is subject to moderate credit risk.

“Over a longer-term horizon, RBS’s restructuring plan should be beneficial for creditors if executed according to plan,” said Andrea Usai, a Moody’s vice president and senior credit officer.

“However, the plan is large and complex, carrying significant execution risk in the short to medium term, happening at a time when the bank has limited financial flexibility to manage unforeseen events, which could arise either from the plan or from other sources, such as further litigation or conduct costs,” Ms. Usai said.

Bailed out in 2008, the bank is 81 percent owned by the British government.

Last month, Ross McEwan, the chief executive of R.B.S., said the lender needed to reshape itself as “a smaller, simpler and smarter bank.” That will include shrinking the investment bank, selling assets and changing its culture.

“The capital plan we announced in November outlined a number of concrete actions to place the bank on a sure footing,” an R.B.S. spokesman said on Thursday. “We are pleased to note that Moody’s has confirmed that our restructuring plan will be a positive development in the medium to long term and will deliver a more efficient, lower-risk UK-focused bank.”

Moody’s kept the bank on a negative outlook given the challenges to executing Mr. McEwan’s vision.

“The rating agency considers that significant headwinds could materialize in the short to medium term, challenging the execution of the overall complex group restructuring, such as the crystallization of unexpected conduct and litigation costs and high-profile pending investigations,” Moody’s said on Thursday.



Lions Gate Pays $7.5 Million Penalty Over Icahn Takeover Battle

Pledging to go after companies that deceive shareholders in the course of fighting off a hostile tender offer, the Securities and Exchange Commission said Thursday that Lions Gate Entertainment had agreed to admit wrongdoing and pay a $7.5 million penalty for its actions in fending off a takeover by Carl C. Icahn.

It was the first time in nearly 30 years that the commission had filed an enforcement action under the tender offer rules against a target of a hostile takeover, said Andrew J. Ceresney, the S.E.C.’s s enforcement director.

“Lions Gate withheld material information just as its shareholders were faced with a critical decision about the future of the company,” he said.. “Full and fair disclosure is crucial in tender offers given that shareholders rely heavily on corporate insiders to make informed decisions, especially in the midst of tender offer battles.”

While the S.E.C. case, filed as an administrative action, claimed only that inaccurate disclosures were made, Mr. Ceresney told reporters that had the tactics been known, they would have clearly violated rules of the New York Stock Exchange. As such, the proxy battle being waged by Mr. Icahn might have come out very differently.

Shareholders of Lions Gate, a motion picture company, may, however, have reason to be happy about the result. Mr. Icahn, the company’s largest shareholder, had offered to buy the company at $6 a share, but the company had frustrated that by adopting a poison pill. He then mounted a proxy battle to elect a minority slate of directors. Largely as a result of the transactions described in the S.E.C. case, he lost that proxy battle.

Lions Gate has since flourished, with successful movies and television shows. On Thursday the shares closed down more than 3 percent, at $32.20.

The tactics cited by the S.E.C. included a board meeting that began one minute after midnight on the morning of July 21, 2010, just after a standstill agreement with Mr. Icahn had expired. At the meeting, the board agreed to change the terms of some convertible bonds to make them immediately convertible at market prices rather than the premium required under the previous terms of the bonds. The holder of the bonds then sold them to Mark Rachesky, who was a director and the second-largest shareholder, who converted them immediately at a price of $6.20 a share. The board changed the rules requiring director acquisition of shares to facilitate the transaction.

The shares he received, the S.E.C. said, provided the margin that assured none of Mr. Icahn’s nominees were elected to the board.

The commission said that the company failed to disclose relevant parts of the transactions, and lied about the others, in proxy materials sent to shareholders before the shareholder vote was taken. It added that under Big Board rules, such a large sale of shares needed the approval of all shareholders, and could not have been completed prior to the vote.

At the time, the company said the bond transactions were part of a previously disclosed plan to reduce the company’s debt. But the S.E.C. said there was no such earlier announcement, and that in fact the company had planned to increase its debt.

Mr. Icahn eventually sold his shares, with the company buying some and Mr. Rachesky, who is now the chairman of the Lion Gates board, purchasing the rest.

Mr. Rachesky declined to comment, a spokeswoman said. Mr. Icahn did not immediately return a call seeking comment.



Moody’s Downgrades Royal Bank of Scotland Ratings

LONDON - The credit rating agency Moody’s Investors Service downgraded the Royal Bank of Scotland’s long-term debt ratings on Thursday.

The agency, a unit of Moody’s Corporation, placed R.B.S. on review last month after the British lender said it would set aside nearly 3 billion pounds, or about $5 billion, to cover potential litigation claims related to mortgage-backed securities and other products sold before the financial crisis.

Last month, the bank announced an £8.2 billion annual loss and said it could be three to five more years before it recovered. The lender is seeking to reshape itself into a customer-centric, British-focused bank after years of aggressive international ambitions.

On Thursday, Moody’s cut the bank holding company’s long-term credit rating a notch to Baa2, a medium-grade rating that is subject to moderate credit risk.

“Over a longer-term horizon, RBS’s restructuring plan should be beneficial for creditors if executed according to plan,” said Andrea Usai, a Moody’s vice president and senior credit officer.

“However, the plan is large and complex, carrying significant execution risk in the short to medium term, happening at a time when the bank has limited financial flexibility to manage unforeseen events, which could arise either from the plan or from other sources, such as further litigation or conduct costs,” Ms. Usai said.

Bailed out in 2008, the bank is 81 percent owned by the British government.

Last month, Ross McEwan, the chief executive of R.B.S., said the lender needed to reshape itself as “a smaller, simpler and smarter bank.” That will include shrinking the investment bank, selling assets and changing its culture.

“The capital plan we announced in November outlined a number of concrete actions to place the bank on a sure footing,” an R.B.S. spokesman said on Thursday. “We are pleased to note that Moody’s has confirmed that our restructuring plan will be a positive development in the medium to long term and will deliver a more efficient, lower-risk UK-focused bank.”

Moody’s kept the bank on a negative outlook given the challenges to executing Mr. McEwan’s vision.

“The rating agency considers that significant headwinds could materialize in the short to medium term, challenging the execution of the overall complex group restructuring, such as the crystallization of unexpected conduct and litigation costs and high-profile pending investigations,” Moody’s said on Thursday.



Lions Gate Pays $7.5 Million Penalty Over Icahn Takeover Battle

Pledging to go after companies that deceive shareholders in the course of fighting off a hostile tender offer, the Securities and Exchange Commission said Thursday that Lions Gate Entertainment had agreed to admit wrongdoing and pay a $7.5 million penalty for its actions in fending off a takeover by Carl C. Icahn.

It was the first time in nearly 30 years that the commission had filed an enforcement action under the tender offer rules against a target of a hostile takeover, said Andrew J. Ceresney, the S.E.C.’s s enforcement director.

“Lions Gate withheld material information just as its shareholders were faced with a critical decision about the future of the company,” he said.. “Full and fair disclosure is crucial in tender offers given that shareholders rely heavily on corporate insiders to make informed decisions, especially in the midst of tender offer battles.”

While the S.E.C. case, filed as an administrative action, claimed only that inaccurate disclosures were made, Mr. Ceresney told reporters that had the tactics been known, they would have clearly violated rules of the New York Stock Exchange. As such, the proxy battle being waged by Mr. Icahn might have come out very differently.

Shareholders of Lions Gate, a motion picture company, may, however, have reason to be happy about the result. Mr. Icahn, the company’s largest shareholder, had offered to buy the company at $6 a share, but the company had frustrated that by adopting a poison pill. He then mounted a proxy battle to elect a minority slate of directors. Largely as a result of the transactions described in the S.E.C. case, he lost that proxy battle.

Lions Gate has since flourished, with successful movies and television shows. On Thursday the shares closed down more than 3 percent, at $32.20.

The tactics cited by the S.E.C. included a board meeting that began one minute after midnight on the morning of July 21, 2010, just after a standstill agreement with Mr. Icahn had expired. At the meeting, the board agreed to change the terms of some convertible bonds to make them immediately convertible at market prices rather than the premium required under the previous terms of the bonds. The holder of the bonds then sold them to Mark Rachesky, who was a director and the second-largest shareholder, who converted them immediately at a price of $6.20 a share. The board changed the rules requiring director acquisition of shares to facilitate the transaction.

The shares he received, the S.E.C. said, provided the margin that assured none of Mr. Icahn’s nominees were elected to the board.

The commission said that the company failed to disclose relevant parts of the transactions, and lied about the others, in proxy materials sent to shareholders before the shareholder vote was taken. It added that under Big Board rules, such a large sale of shares needed the approval of all shareholders, and could not have been completed prior to the vote.

At the time, the company said the bond transactions were part of a previously disclosed plan to reduce the company’s debt. But the S.E.C. said there was no such earlier announcement, and that in fact the company had planned to increase its debt.

Mr. Icahn eventually sold his shares, with the company buying some and Mr. Rachesky, who is now the chairman of the Lion Gates board, purchasing the rest.

Mr. Rachesky declined to comment, a spokeswoman said. Mr. Icahn did not immediately return a call seeking comment.



A Mixed Week for Ackman

From one perspective, the hedge fund manager William A. Ackman had a good day on Wednesday. The Federal Trade Commission announced an investigation into Herbalife, a company that he is betting against, sending its shares tumbling.

While that drama was playing out, however, another of Mr. Ackman’s bets was coming under pressure. Shares of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the mortgage giants that were rescued by the government in the financial crisis, were falling after Washington lawmakers proposed winding them down. Mr. Ackman, through his firm, Pershing Square Capital Management, is a major holder of those shares. (Pershing Square, in fact, is the largest shareholder after the United States government.)

The plan to eliminate Fannie and Freddie was announced on Tuesday by the top Democrat and Republican on the Senate Banking Committee. They proposed a housing finance overhaul that would provide an explicit government guarantee for mortgages after private investors take the first losses.

Here is a look at how those investments did this week through Wednesday, with a few more of Mr. Ackman’s holdings thrown in for good measure.

Bearish bet

- Herbalife: down 6.4 percent

Bullish bets

- Fannie Mae: down 33.6 percent

- Freddie Mac: down 34.8 percent

- Air Products & Chemicals: down 1.6 percent

- Procter & Gamble: up 1.1 percent

- General Growth Properties: up 1 percent

- Canadian Pacific Railway: up 0.5 percent



Draghi Praises European Banks That Are Cleaning Up Their Books

FRANKFURT â€" The president of the European Central Bank said on Thursday that euro zone banks face a period of ‘‘creative destruction’’ that will be healthy for the economy, and he praised the banks that were moving more aggressively to deal with their problems.

The remarks in Vienna by Mario Draghi, the central bank’s president, came two days after UniCredit, Italy’s largest lender, reported a fourth-quarter loss of 15 billion euros, or nearly $21 billion, as it acknowledged the diminished value of its holdings and set aside more money to cover bad loans.

Mr. Draghi did not mention UniCredit by name, but the bank’s action was widely seen as a response to plans by the E.C.B. to scour banks’ books and uncover problems that lenders may have been trying to keep hidden.

Pressure from the central bank, which plans to complete its review of banks by October, is expected to prompt many other lenders to follow UniCredit’s lead.

‘‘Just the prospect’’ of E.C.B. scrutiny, Mr. Draghi said in a prepared text released ahead of his speech, ‘‘has already caused banks to raise new capital and to shed noncore or nonprofitable exposures. This is very welcome: Corrective action does not need to wait until the end of our comprehensive assessment. It is to everybody’s benefit that it takes place preemptively.’’

‘‘By ‘cleaning up’ and repairing bank balance sheets, we are creating the conditions necessary for resources to flow once more to the firms that use them most productively,’’ Mr. Draghi said. ‘‘And in this sense, by encouraging creative destruction in the banking sector, we can facilitate creative destruction in the wider economy and support the recovery.’’

Mr. Draghi made the comments while accepting a prize named for Joseph Schumpeter, the Austrian economist who coined the term creative destruction. The phrase refers to the free market process by which companies that are the most innovative and efficient displace those that are less so.

Some bankers have argued that they will have trouble lending as they undergo a period of onerous scrutiny by a central bank that is exercising new oversight powers. Mr. Draghi argued that the opposite was true. Banks that roll over bad loans, rather than writing them off, keep the weak ones alive and deny credit to entrepreneurs. Exposing such ‘‘zombie’’ banks will help credit flow to the companies that can make the best use of the money, Mr. Draghi said.

The E.C.B. assessment of banks ‘‘will shed light on bank assets, ensure that problematic assets are fully recognized and prompt timely corrective action in the form of bank restructuring and capital replenishment,’’ Mr. Draghi said.

‘‘Firms that no longer have a viable business model should go into insolvency,’’ he said.



Another Proposal to Repair Relations Between Boards and Investors

Increased shareholder activism, lawsuits filed by investors and continued malfeasance by  financial institutions is prompting a renewed bout of introspection by some executives, board members and investors.

This week, the Conference Board, working with a rival group of Wall Street advisers, released a set of suggestions to improve relations across corporate America.

It is the second such attempt in recent months. In February, a group calling itself the Shareholder-Director Exchange, unveiled a protocol intended to improve relations between board members and investors, who often feel alienated enough to back activist campaigns.

But the recommendations from the Conference Board look beyond the push from corporate activists and aim to address a more basic reputation problem: by and large, the public doesn’t trust big business.

“From accounting scandals to the global financial crisis, events of the past decade have damaged the reputation of business, contributing to a public distrust of business in general,” the report reads.

As an antidote, the report suggests a number of steps that at first glance seem like common sense, but are not always commonplace.

To formulate the recommendations, the Conference Board brought together company executives, institutional investors and even activist investors. Among those who participated in its development were the activist Ralph Whitworth, founder of Relational Investors and a director at Hewlett-Packard; Brian Rogers, chairman of T. Rowe Price; Fred Hassan, a partner at the private equity firm Warburg Pincus; and Charles Elson, a professor of governance at the University of Delaware.

The group put together an multipronged proposal to get public companies and their investors on the same page, and restore the public’s broken trust.

The first plea is for a commitment by all parties to listen to one another and consider varying perspectives of shareholder value. Some investors may want a short-term rise in the stock price. Others may be looking for long-term returns. And still other shareholders may be concerned with minimizing a company’s environmental impact. To create sustainable value, the Conference Board suggests, companies should listen to all these stakeholders.

Second, the report reminds directors that they should listen to investors â€" not only because they have a fiduciary duty to do so, but also because they can be voted out if they don’t. Though the Conference Board supports the central that role directors play at public companies today, it seeks to remind them that they should not disregard the wishes of their shareholders, even if they disagree.

Investors, meanwhile, should be more transparent about their policies and positions, the report contends. And instead of simply relying on the advice of proxy advisory firms like Institutional Shareholder Services and Glass Lewis, investors should conduct their own research before voting on corporate governance matters.

Proxy advisory firms, in turn, should do a better job of avoiding the appearance of conflicts of interest, disclosing in their recommendations to investors whether they had been paid by that company for consulting services.

When it comes to compensation, the report is short on specific recommendations, but it advocates payment policies that support “sustainable” shareholder value. In other words, bonuses that reward a short-term sale of the company are unlikely to win the trust of investors, or the public.

The Conference Board advocates dialogue between boards and investors in special circumstances, but it distinguishes itself from the Shareholder-Director Exchange by stating that “it should not be a routine method of engagement for most U.S. companies and investors.”

“Not all companies or all investors need to engage directly with each other or engage all the time,” the report reads. “Overengagement can lead to systemic overload and inefficient use of limited resources.”

Finally, the report calls for changes from the Securities and Exchange Commission. On the wish list: fewer comprehensive disclosure requirements for companies, and more scrutiny of â€" and changes to â€" the proxy voting system.

It’s a noble effort. But like the Shareholder-Director Exchange protocol, the Conference Board’s recommendations will only have an impact if other companies, board members and investors take heed.

In this age of contentions corporate governance â€" where activists make their case on Twitter and companies continue to adopt poison pills with ease â€" there is still a long way to go before business has regained the public’s trust.



Star-Struck by Alibaba’s Movie Company Deal

The e-commerce giant Alibaba’s latest deal shows the extent of investor frenzy for China’s Internet. The company announced on Tuesday that it had agreed to buy 60 percent of the ChinaVision Media Group, which is listed in Hong Kong, for $804 million. The film company’s market value promptly soared to almost $5 billion. Star-struck investors are too easily excited.

ChinaVision is issuing new stock to Alibaba at 50 Hong Kong cents a share, a 22 percent discount to its closing price before the announcement, valuing the existing film production and distribution group at around $1.3 billion. Yet ChinaVision shares, which had already risen before the deal, promptly tripled in value.

Investors seem to be excited about having Alibaba as a major shareholder, but details are missing. ChinaVision’s core business is film production and rights distribution, and the company’s mobile video operation accounted for just 1 percent of total revenue in the first half of 2013.

Investors may be betting on Alibaba moving into digital entertainment - it started a set-top box and television operating system last year. ChinaVision’s movies and film rights could help give it a toehold in online video and entertainment. But even if Alibaba is successful, it is not clear that would transform the Hong Kong unit’s prospects.

Another possibility is that Alibaba wants to use ChinaVision as a back door to a stock market listing. Jack Ma’s company is locked in an impasse with Hong Kong stock market regulators over its corporate governance structure. In the unlikely event that Alibaba tried, it is hard to imagine the authorities would allow a company with a likely valuation of more than $100 billion to sneak onto the market.

There are two possible conclusions to draw from ChinaVision’s surge: either the founders undervalued the company when selling to Alibaba, or investors have become star-struck. The latter seems the more likely.

Earlier this year, Alibaba participated in a consortium that invested $170 million in a pharmaceutical data company. The shares have risen sevenfold since the announcement.

Shares of China South City Holdings, a logistics firm, have doubled since it sold a 9.9 percent stake to the media and game giant Tencent. As long as investors are so easily excited by China’s Internet, companies will continue to cash in on the enthusiasm

Robyn Mak is a research assistant for Reuters Breakingviews. For more independent commentary and analysis, visit breakingviews.com.



Bank of England Seeks to Expand Clawback Rules

LONDON - Bankers who engage in misconduct could have their bonuses clawed back for up to six years after the improper conduct under a new rule proposed by the Bank of England.

Under Britain’s so-called remuneration code, the Prudential Regulation Authority, a regulator within the central bank, can now require the lenders it regulates to recoup bonuses that have been deferred when there is misconduct, actions that lead to significant losses and failures of risk management. Under the proposal, the clawbacks would also apply to supervisors of employees who engage in improper behavior.

On Thursday, the authority opened a two-month public comment period to examine expanding clawbacks to include bonuses that have already been paid out. Under the proposal, banks regulated by the Bank of England would have to include the new provision in their employment contracts.

“The policy we are consulting on will ensure bonuses can be clawed back from individuals, where they have already been paid, if it becomes apparent they have put the stability of their firms at risk or engaged in inappropriate actions,” Andrew Bailey, the P.R.A. chief executive, said in a statement. “This will provide a clear message to individuals of what is expected from them and the consequences of not acting properly.”

The new clawback rules would apply to persons who “could have been reasonably expected to be aware of the failure or misconduct at the time but failed to take adequate steps” to report or stop it.

The proposal also would apply to supervisors deemed indirectly responsible for the failure or misconduct, “including senior staff in charge of setting the firm’s culture and strategy.”

The rules would go into effect on Jan. 1, 2015, but could be applied to bonuses awards granted before the date but vest later.

The six-year time frame reflects the statutory limit under British contract law.

The proposal comes as regulators in Europe and in Britain are facing pressure from lawmakers to discourage risky behavior by bankers that might fuel another financial crisis.

Last week, the European Commission adopted the final framework for a cap on bonuses paid to bank employees.

The 2013 European law limits the bonuses of certain bankers to 100 percent of an employee’s fixed salary, or two times their salary if approved by shareholders.

The law has led some banks to find ways to sidestep the cap, such as adopting so-called role-based pay.

Clawbacks have become a more common way to address bad behavior in the financial industry in recent years.

In the United States, the Dodd-Frank Act, passed in 2010, allows for clawbacks of up to three years on incentive pay to executive officers if there is an accounting restatement. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act, passed in 2002, allowed for the clawback of bonuses from a company’s chief executive and its chief accounting officer if there is financial restatement.

Many banks also have begun including clawback provisions in their employment contracts or pursuing lawsuits to recoup salary and bonuses from former employees convicted of criminal misconduct.

Last year, Joseph Skowron III, a former fund manager, was ordered to pay back $31 million to Morgan Stanley in compensation after he was convicted of insider trading and a federal judge in Manhattan found he was a “faithless servant.”

On Wednesday, Fabrice Tourre, the former Goldman Sachs trader, was ordered by a federal judge in Manhattan to forfeit a bonus of roughly $175,000 tied to his work on troubled mortgage deal at the center of his high-profile trial last year. He was ordered to pay $825,000 in penalties and other costs.

In a civil case brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission, Mr. Tourre was found liable by a federal jury last year of defrauding investors.



Gleacher & Co. Announces Plans to Liquidate

Gleacher & Company, the troubled investment bank that had tried unsuccessfully to sell itself, announced on Thursday that it planned to liquidate its assets, closing up shop after 24 years.

The bank, which was founded by the longtime Wall Street deal maker Eric Gleacher, who left it last year, said its board had unanimously decided that it was in the best interest of shareholders to dissolve and liquidate the company. The decision could spell the end of the boutique firm, which struggled since the financial crisis and has not reported an annual profit since 2009.

Though the board pursued other options, “the process to date has not yielded any opportunities viewed by the board as reasonably likely to provide greater realizable value to stockholders than the complete dissolution and liquidation of the company,” Mark Patterson, the chairman, said in a statement.

Separately, Gleacher said on Thursday that it had suffered a net loss of $2.9 million, or 47 cents a share, in the fourth quarter of 2013. That was narrower than the $11.3 million loss it reported a year earlier.

Shares of the bank, listed on the Nasdaq, fell more than 2 percent on Thursday morning to a little above $11. The dissolution proposal is subject to a shareholder vote at the annual meeting on May 29.

If the liquidation proposal is approved, the company plans to sell its assets and return the cash to shareholders, after paying expenses and setting aside reserves to cover any future claims.

The initial distribution to shareholders is expected to be about $20 million, or $3.23 a share, the company said. That could rise to a total of $60 million to $90 million, or $9.70 to $14.55 a share, if a portion of the reserves is ultimately distributed to shareholders.

The plan outlines a final chapter for a bank founded by one of the star deal makers of the 1980s. Gleacher & Company, which provided advice for mergers and acquisitions and other transactions, never managed to recover from the financial crisis, even as other small investment banks won business by pitching the simplicity of their business model compared with the Wall Street giants.

Mr. Gleacher, a banker at Lehman Brothers and Morgan Stanley who participated in the fight over RJR Nabisco, started the bank in 1990. He sold it in 1995 to National Westminster Bank, but then took it private four years later. In 2009, amid a slump on Wall Street, the bank was acquired by the brokerage firm Broadpoint Securities, which adopted the Gleacher name.

With mounting losses, the bank announced in 2012 that it was exploring a sale. But no buyers materialized. Mr. Gleacher, the chairman at the time, departed the firm early last year.

Then, last June, Gleacher & Company announced that it was shutting down its investment banking business. It named a restructuring expert as its chief executive, portending tough decisions ahead.



U.S. Overstates Efforts to Prosecute Mortgage Fraud, Watchdog Says

The Justice Department has repeatedly and significantly overstated its efforts to prosecute mortgage fraud, an internal watchdog said on Thursday in a report that cited the department’s “disturbing” inability to verify its information.

The report by the department’s inspector general undercuts the Obama administration’s contentions that it is cracking down on those responsible for the collapse of the financial and housing markets. The administration has been criticized, in particular, for not pursuing large banks and their executives.

Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. announced in 2012 that prosecutors had charged 530 people over the previous year in cases related to mortgage fraud that had cost homeowners more than $1 billion.

Almost immediately, the Justice Department realized it could not back up those statistics, the inspector general said. After months of review, it was clear that only 107 people were charged.

The $1 billion figure, it turned out, had been drastically inflated. It was actually $95 million, the inspector general said.

Yet Justice Department officials repeated those claims for months, even after it was obvious the figures were wrong, the inspector general said.



Herbalife Takes a Tumble

For 15 months, the activist investor William A. Ackman has accused Herbalife of being a pyramid scheme, betting $1 billion on its collapse. Since Mr. Ackman’s crusade began in December 2012, he has lobbied members of Congress to press state and federal regulators, specifically the Federal Trade Commission, to investigate Herbalife.

So while it was far from a victory for Mr. Ackman, Herbalife’s disclosure on Wednesday that it had received a civil investigative demand from the F.T.C. could be a boon for Mr. Ackman’s $1 billion bet against the company after a series of setbacks, Alexandra Stevenson and Peter Eavis write in DealBook. Indeed, the news of the investigation prompted a sell-off in the stock, which dropped more than 15 percent on Wednesday before recovering somewhat. It closed down 7.4 percent, at $60.57 a share.

QUESTIONING THE ROT IN BANKING CULTURE  |  Many of the sins big banks have committed in recent years have been blamed on a few bad actors. Now, some government authorities are publicly questioning whether such misdeeds â€" including money laundering, market rigging, selling faulty financial products â€" are signs that there is something rotten in bank culture, Peter Eavis writes in DealBook. Congress and government authorities have taken many steps to prevent banks from being “too big to fail,” but these efforts, according to some regulators, have not focused on cleaning up the deeply rooted cultural and ethical failures at many large financial institutions.

Regulators have recently begun to voice their concerns, but they may find it hard to convince the public that they are serious, given how long they have waited since the financial crisis to question the moral fabric of the banking industry. And as new scandals occur, they may have to “take to the bully pulpit” to assert these types of critical pronouncements, Mr. Eavis writes.

“At the heart of the issue is an inviolate social contract that bankers are supposed to honor. The government agrees to protect banks from collapse, and in return, bankers are meant to uphold the highest ethics when handling other people’s money. But when lawbreaking and other missteps proliferate at banks, it is a sign that the industry has stopped cleaving to the special contract, endangering taxpayers,” Mr. Eavis writes. “The big question is whether regulators have the resolve to back up their tough words with meaningful punishments.”

A HEFTY FINE FOR FORMER GOLDMAN SACHS TRADER  |  The Securities and Exchange Commission has not had the greatest luck in the courtroom. But in a ruling that may embolden the regulator to take more cases to trial, a federal judge on Wednesday ordered Fabrice Tourre, the former Goldman Sachs trader who pocketed millions of dollars on Wall Street before a federal investigation derailed his career and redefined him as the face of the financial crisis, to pay the S.E.C. $825,000 for defrauding investors in a mortgage deal that imploded during the crisis, Ben Protess writes in DealBook.

Mr. Protess writes: “The ruling, a capstone to one of the S.E.C.’s most prominent Wall Street cases and its first significant courtroom victory stemming from the financial crisis, was equal parts validation and leverage for an agency that has threatened harsher penalties and fewer settlements. The case could signal to Wall Street employees, with all their legal resources, that the agency is willing to take them on and just might win.” But, he adds, the S.E.C.’s track record in other recent trials â€" it has lost five of its last 12 â€" shows that challenges remain.

The judge’s decision is the latest setback for Mr. Tourre. Most recently, the University of Chicago confirmed last week that he would no longer teach an undergraduate economics class in the spring quarter.

ON THE AGENDA  |  Weekly jobless claims are out at 8:30 a.m. The latest data for retail sales in February is out at 8:30 a.m. February’s import and export price indexes are out at 8:30 a.m. Business inventories for January are out at 10 a.m. The Treasury budget report for February is released at 2 p.m. Timothy J. Sloan, the chief financial officer of Wells Fargo, is on CNBC at 7:15 a.m. Sean Rad, the chief executive of the dating application Tinder, is on CNBC at 5 p.m. Happy birthday, Jamie Dimon. Mr. Dimon, the chairman and chief executive of JPMorgan Chase, celebrates birthday No. 58.

Federal Reserve Confirmation Hearing: The Senate Banking Committee holds a rescheduled confirmation hearing at 10 a.m. for Stanley Fischer, a former head of the Bank of Israel, who was nominated as the Federal Reserve’s next vice chairman. Also up for confirmation are Lael Brainard, a former Treasury official who has been nominated to the Fed’s board of governors, and a current Fed governor, Jerome H. Powell, who is up for a new term.

CANDY CRUSH MAKER PUTS VALUE AT $7.6 BILLION  |  King Digital Entertainment, the maker of the wildly popular game Candy Crush Saga, said on Wednesday that it expected to price its shares at $21 to $24 each in its initial public offering, which would value the company at $7.6 billion, Michael J. de la Merced and Nick Wingfield write in DealBook. But while the price seems tasty, the offering values King at a discount to other video game companies, possibly reflecting caution about the company’s reliance on its megahit, which accounts for nearly 80 percent of its earnings, they add.

King’s disclosures have led many analysts to question whether the game maker can continue to thrive as a public company once its biggest hit fades in popularity. For its part, the company has warned that it expects Candy Crush to decline over time and contribute less to its sales.

Robert Cyran of Reuters Breakingviews writes: “The company makes much of its ‘unique, repeatable, scalable’ system of developing and distributing new games. There’s some truth to that â€" the company has been cash-flow positive for nine years. So it can probably trundle along for a while even if it can’t develop a new hit when its current one fades. That’s hardly a basis for such a lofty I.P.O. valuation.”

 

Mergers & Acquisitions »

Buffett Shrinks Ties to the Graham FamilyBerkshire Shrinks Ties to the Graham Family  |  Berkshire Hathaway disclosed that it planned to exchange the bulk of its holdings in Graham Holdings â€" about 1.6 million shares â€" for a Miami television station, cash and some shares that Graham holds in Berkshire. DealBook »

Bouygues Raises Bid for SFR, Vivendi’s Mobile Unit  |  Bouygues said on Thursday that it had raised its bid for SFR, the mobile phone unit of Vivendi, as it competed in a bidding war with the cable and cellphone operator Altice. Vivendi’s board is expected to consider the competing proposals on Friday. DealBook »

Lineage Logistics to Buy Millard Refrigerated  |  Lineage Logistics Holdings is said to have agreed to acquire Millard Refrigerated Services in a deal valued at about $1 billion, The Wall Street Journal writes, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation. WALL STREET JOURNAL

Energy XXI to Acquire EPL Oil & Gas  |  Energy XXI has agreed to buy EPL Oil & Gas in a $1.53 billion cash and stock deal, The Wall Street Journal reports. The merger would result in the largest publicly traded oil and natural gas producer in the Gulf of Mexico’s shallow waters, known as the Shelf. WALL STREET JOURNAL

INVESTMENT BANKING »

Average Wall St. Bonus Increased by 15% in 2013Average Wall St. Bonus Increased by 15% in 2013  |  The average bonus was $164,530 for workers at New York’s security firms, the highest average bonus since before the financial crisis in 2007. DealBook »

Citi Reduces the Pay of Its Mexico Chairman Amid InquiriesCiti Reduces the Pay of Its Mexico Chairman Amid Inquiries  |  Citigroup cut the 2013 pay of its chairman for Mexico, Manuel Medina-Mora, by about $1.1 million from 2012, citing “control issues” at its Banamex USA unit. DealBook »

British Regulator Adds Industry Veteran to Supervise Investment Banks  |  Julia Hoggett, a managing director at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, will join the Financial Conduct Authority in May as head of investment banking as the regulator looks to bolster its expertise. DealBook »

Goldman Sachs Investment Bank Strategy Chief Departs  |  Samuel Robinson, the chief administrative officer and head of strategy for the investment banking division at Goldman Sachs, is leaving the firm after 18 years, Bloomberg News writes. BLOOMBERG NEWS

PRIVATE EQUITY »

Renaissance Learning Is Sold to Hellman & Friedman for $1.1 Billion  |  The education analysis company Renaissance Learning plans to announce that it has been sold to the private equity firm Hellman & Friedman for $1.1 billion. Google Capital, which invested in the company last month, plans to stay on board. DealBook »

K.K.R. Considers Sale of Singer Sewing Machine Company  |  The private equity firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts is exploring a sale of the Singer sewing machine company in a deal that could fetch more than $500 million, Reuters reports. REUTERS

Cloud Marketing Firm Vocus Explores Sale  |  Industry rivals and private equity firms including GTCR have expressed interest in buying Vocus, a provider of cloud marketing software, which is looking to sell itself, Reuters writes, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation. REUTERS

HEDGE FUNDS »

Elliott Raises Stake in Juniper Networks  |  The hedge fund Elliott Management is raising its bet on Juniper Networks after the networking equipment company announced a series of new initiatives. DealBook »

Hedge Fund Managers Could Be Living in a Fake Reality  |  “The question some of the world’s biggest hedge funds are starting to ask is whether overly placid investors will also wake up to discover they are living in a ‘Truman Show market’ - where central bankers’ ultra loose monetary policy has manufactured a fake reality that is bound to end,” Miles Johnson writes in The Financial Times. FINANCIAL TIMES

A Possible ‘Inside Joke’ in SAC’s New Name  |  In a letter to employees on Tuesday, SAC Capital Advisors described its name change, to Point72, as a reference to the hedge funds Stamford, Conn., address. “While the address could well be the principal reason, the number 72 suggests another possible meaning that people seem to be missing,” Quartz writes. In finance, the “rule of 72” refers to a quick calculation used to figure out how long it will take for an investment to double at a fixed annual rate of return. QUARTZ

I.P.O./OFFERINGS »

Danish Outsourcing Firm ISS Surges in I.P.O.  |  The third time was a charm for ISS, which went public on the Nasdaq OMX Copenhagen exchange on Thursday after planned offerings in 2007 and 2011 were delayed. DealBook »

Alibaba Is Said to Be Close to Choosing New York for I.P.O.  |  The Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba is “95 percent certain” it will choose New York over Hong Kong for its initial public offering, The Financial Times reports, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation. FINANCIAL TIMES

British Private Equity Firm Plans I.P.O. of Phibro Animal Health  |  The British private equity firm 3i Group is planning to sell a stake in Phibro Animal Health, a maker and marketer of animal health and nutrition products, in an initial public offering that aims to raise as much as $230 million, The Wall Street Journal writes. WALL STREET JOURNAL

Premium Pet Food Firm Preparing for I.P.O.  |  The premium pet food company Blue Buffalo has selected JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley and Citigroup to lead an initial public offering that could come later this year, Reuters writes, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation. REUTERS

No Plans Yet for Palantir I.P.O.  |  Palantir Technologies, a semisecretive data analytics firm backed in part by the C.I.A., said it would not go public in the near future, CNBC reports. CNBC

VENTURE CAPITAL »

Credit Karma, a Credit Score Service, Raises $85 Million  |  The nearly seven-year-old start-up Credit Karma announced a third round of fund-raising on Wednesday. It was led by Google through an investment arm that specializes in late-stage technology companies. DealBook »

Silicon Valley’s Youth Problem  |  In start-up land, the young barely talk to the old (and vice versa). That makes for a lot of cool applications. But great technology? Not so much, Yiren Lu writes in The New York Times Magazine. NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE

Supporting Start-Ups With Connections, Advice and Caffeine  |  The 1 Million Cups program is run by entrepreneurs to help build the start-up community, and local chapters are springing up across the country, The New York Times reports. NEW YORK TIMES

Atomico Adds to Investment in BrazilAtomico Adds to Investment in Brazil  |  The venture capital firm led by Niklas Zennstrom, a co-founder of Skype, has led a new round of financing in Bebestore, an online baby and maternal goods company in Brazil that it has backed before. The new investment indicates that e-commerce remains attractive in Brazil. DealBook »

LEGAL/REGULATORY »

Jefferies in $25 Million Settlement With S.E.C.  |  The Jefferies Group, the investment bank and brokerage firm, agreed to settle accusations by the Securities and Exchange Commission that it failed to supervise traders who lied to investors about the price of mortgage-backed securities. DealBook »

Financial Adviser Sidesteps Prison in Bond-Rigging Case  |  Despite prosecutors’ recommendation for a prison sentence of at least 19 years, David Rubin of CDR Financial Products was sentenced to two years’ probation. DealBook »

Fannie Mae Investors May Be Using Magic CalculatorsFannie Mae Investors May Be Using Magic Calculators  |  The price of Fannie Mae’s preferred stock is up more than tenfold in 18 months, but even cheerful assumptions suggest its business is not worth enough for shareholders to get much, if anything, back after an overhaul, Daniel Indiviglio and Richard Beales write in Reuters Breakingviews. DealBook »

Fed Nominee Has a Long History of Policy Leadership  |  Stanley Fischer, the nominee for vice chairman of the Federal Reserve, has been an influential academic as well as head of the Bank of Israel, The New York Times reports. NEW YORK TIMES

Fed Official Predicts a Soft Landing  |  John Williams, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, answered questions for the Economix blog about the Fed’s retreat from bond buying and forward guidance and said he was optimistic that this time, the Fed will manage to produce a soft landing. NEW YORK TIMES ECONOMIX

China Moves on Banking Reforms  |  Higher interest rates and privately owned banks can help strengthen China’s banking system, according to a New York Times editorial. NEW YORK TIMES



Herbalife Takes a Tumble

For 15 months, the activist investor William A. Ackman has accused Herbalife of being a pyramid scheme, betting $1 billion on its collapse. Since Mr. Ackman’s crusade began in December 2012, he has lobbied members of Congress to press state and federal regulators, specifically the Federal Trade Commission, to investigate Herbalife.

So while it was far from a victory for Mr. Ackman, Herbalife’s disclosure on Wednesday that it had received a civil investigative demand from the F.T.C. could be a boon for Mr. Ackman’s $1 billion bet against the company after a series of setbacks, Alexandra Stevenson and Peter Eavis write in DealBook. Indeed, the news of the investigation prompted a sell-off in the stock, which dropped more than 15 percent on Wednesday before recovering somewhat. It closed down 7.4 percent, at $60.57 a share.

QUESTIONING THE ROT IN BANKING CULTURE  |  Many of the sins big banks have committed in recent years have been blamed on a few bad actors. Now, some government authorities are publicly questioning whether such misdeeds â€" including money laundering, market rigging, selling faulty financial products â€" are signs that there is something rotten in bank culture, Peter Eavis writes in DealBook. Congress and government authorities have taken many steps to prevent banks from being “too big to fail,” but these efforts, according to some regulators, have not focused on cleaning up the deeply rooted cultural and ethical failures at many large financial institutions.

Regulators have recently begun to voice their concerns, but they may find it hard to convince the public that they are serious, given how long they have waited since the financial crisis to question the moral fabric of the banking industry. And as new scandals occur, they may have to “take to the bully pulpit” to assert these types of critical pronouncements, Mr. Eavis writes.

“At the heart of the issue is an inviolate social contract that bankers are supposed to honor. The government agrees to protect banks from collapse, and in return, bankers are meant to uphold the highest ethics when handling other people’s money. But when lawbreaking and other missteps proliferate at banks, it is a sign that the industry has stopped cleaving to the special contract, endangering taxpayers,” Mr. Eavis writes. “The big question is whether regulators have the resolve to back up their tough words with meaningful punishments.”

A HEFTY FINE FOR FORMER GOLDMAN SACHS TRADER  |  The Securities and Exchange Commission has not had the greatest luck in the courtroom. But in a ruling that may embolden the regulator to take more cases to trial, a federal judge on Wednesday ordered Fabrice Tourre, the former Goldman Sachs trader who pocketed millions of dollars on Wall Street before a federal investigation derailed his career and redefined him as the face of the financial crisis, to pay the S.E.C. $825,000 for defrauding investors in a mortgage deal that imploded during the crisis, Ben Protess writes in DealBook.

Mr. Protess writes: “The ruling, a capstone to one of the S.E.C.’s most prominent Wall Street cases and its first significant courtroom victory stemming from the financial crisis, was equal parts validation and leverage for an agency that has threatened harsher penalties and fewer settlements. The case could signal to Wall Street employees, with all their legal resources, that the agency is willing to take them on and just might win.” But, he adds, the S.E.C.’s track record in other recent trials â€" it has lost five of its last 12 â€" shows that challenges remain.

The judge’s decision is the latest setback for Mr. Tourre. Most recently, the University of Chicago confirmed last week that he would no longer teach an undergraduate economics class in the spring quarter.

ON THE AGENDA  |  Weekly jobless claims are out at 8:30 a.m. The latest data for retail sales in February is out at 8:30 a.m. February’s import and export price indexes are out at 8:30 a.m. Business inventories for January are out at 10 a.m. The Treasury budget report for February is released at 2 p.m. Timothy J. Sloan, the chief financial officer of Wells Fargo, is on CNBC at 7:15 a.m. Sean Rad, the chief executive of the dating application Tinder, is on CNBC at 5 p.m. Happy birthday, Jamie Dimon. Mr. Dimon, the chairman and chief executive of JPMorgan Chase, celebrates birthday No. 58.

Federal Reserve Confirmation Hearing: The Senate Banking Committee holds a rescheduled confirmation hearing at 10 a.m. for Stanley Fischer, a former head of the Bank of Israel, who was nominated as the Federal Reserve’s next vice chairman. Also up for confirmation are Lael Brainard, a former Treasury official who has been nominated to the Fed’s board of governors, and a current Fed governor, Jerome H. Powell, who is up for a new term.

CANDY CRUSH MAKER PUTS VALUE AT $7.6 BILLION  |  King Digital Entertainment, the maker of the wildly popular game Candy Crush Saga, said on Wednesday that it expected to price its shares at $21 to $24 each in its initial public offering, which would value the company at $7.6 billion, Michael J. de la Merced and Nick Wingfield write in DealBook. But while the price seems tasty, the offering values King at a discount to other video game companies, possibly reflecting caution about the company’s reliance on its megahit, which accounts for nearly 80 percent of its earnings, they add.

King’s disclosures have led many analysts to question whether the game maker can continue to thrive as a public company once its biggest hit fades in popularity. For its part, the company has warned that it expects Candy Crush to decline over time and contribute less to its sales.

Robert Cyran of Reuters Breakingviews writes: “The company makes much of its ‘unique, repeatable, scalable’ system of developing and distributing new games. There’s some truth to that â€" the company has been cash-flow positive for nine years. So it can probably trundle along for a while even if it can’t develop a new hit when its current one fades. That’s hardly a basis for such a lofty I.P.O. valuation.”

 

Mergers & Acquisitions »

Buffett Shrinks Ties to the Graham FamilyBerkshire Shrinks Ties to the Graham Family  |  Berkshire Hathaway disclosed that it planned to exchange the bulk of its holdings in Graham Holdings â€" about 1.6 million shares â€" for a Miami television station, cash and some shares that Graham holds in Berkshire. DealBook »

Bouygues Raises Bid for SFR, Vivendi’s Mobile Unit  |  Bouygues said on Thursday that it had raised its bid for SFR, the mobile phone unit of Vivendi, as it competed in a bidding war with the cable and cellphone operator Altice. Vivendi’s board is expected to consider the competing proposals on Friday. DealBook »

Lineage Logistics to Buy Millard Refrigerated  |  Lineage Logistics Holdings is said to have agreed to acquire Millard Refrigerated Services in a deal valued at about $1 billion, The Wall Street Journal writes, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation. WALL STREET JOURNAL

Energy XXI to Acquire EPL Oil & Gas  |  Energy XXI has agreed to buy EPL Oil & Gas in a $1.53 billion cash and stock deal, The Wall Street Journal reports. The merger would result in the largest publicly traded oil and natural gas producer in the Gulf of Mexico’s shallow waters, known as the Shelf. WALL STREET JOURNAL

INVESTMENT BANKING »

Average Wall St. Bonus Increased by 15% in 2013Average Wall St. Bonus Increased by 15% in 2013  |  The average bonus was $164,530 for workers at New York’s security firms, the highest average bonus since before the financial crisis in 2007. DealBook »

Citi Reduces the Pay of Its Mexico Chairman Amid InquiriesCiti Reduces the Pay of Its Mexico Chairman Amid Inquiries  |  Citigroup cut the 2013 pay of its chairman for Mexico, Manuel Medina-Mora, by about $1.1 million from 2012, citing “control issues” at its Banamex USA unit. DealBook »

British Regulator Adds Industry Veteran to Supervise Investment Banks  |  Julia Hoggett, a managing director at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, will join the Financial Conduct Authority in May as head of investment banking as the regulator looks to bolster its expertise. DealBook »

Goldman Sachs Investment Bank Strategy Chief Departs  |  Samuel Robinson, the chief administrative officer and head of strategy for the investment banking division at Goldman Sachs, is leaving the firm after 18 years, Bloomberg News writes. BLOOMBERG NEWS

PRIVATE EQUITY »

Renaissance Learning Is Sold to Hellman & Friedman for $1.1 Billion  |  The education analysis company Renaissance Learning plans to announce that it has been sold to the private equity firm Hellman & Friedman for $1.1 billion. Google Capital, which invested in the company last month, plans to stay on board. DealBook »

K.K.R. Considers Sale of Singer Sewing Machine Company  |  The private equity firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts is exploring a sale of the Singer sewing machine company in a deal that could fetch more than $500 million, Reuters reports. REUTERS

Cloud Marketing Firm Vocus Explores Sale  |  Industry rivals and private equity firms including GTCR have expressed interest in buying Vocus, a provider of cloud marketing software, which is looking to sell itself, Reuters writes, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation. REUTERS

HEDGE FUNDS »

Elliott Raises Stake in Juniper Networks  |  The hedge fund Elliott Management is raising its bet on Juniper Networks after the networking equipment company announced a series of new initiatives. DealBook »

Hedge Fund Managers Could Be Living in a Fake Reality  |  “The question some of the world’s biggest hedge funds are starting to ask is whether overly placid investors will also wake up to discover they are living in a ‘Truman Show market’ - where central bankers’ ultra loose monetary policy has manufactured a fake reality that is bound to end,” Miles Johnson writes in The Financial Times. FINANCIAL TIMES

A Possible ‘Inside Joke’ in SAC’s New Name  |  In a letter to employees on Tuesday, SAC Capital Advisors described its name change, to Point72, as a reference to the hedge funds Stamford, Conn., address. “While the address could well be the principal reason, the number 72 suggests another possible meaning that people seem to be missing,” Quartz writes. In finance, the “rule of 72” refers to a quick calculation used to figure out how long it will take for an investment to double at a fixed annual rate of return. QUARTZ

I.P.O./OFFERINGS »

Danish Outsourcing Firm ISS Surges in I.P.O.  |  The third time was a charm for ISS, which went public on the Nasdaq OMX Copenhagen exchange on Thursday after planned offerings in 2007 and 2011 were delayed. DealBook »

Alibaba Is Said to Be Close to Choosing New York for I.P.O.  |  The Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba is “95 percent certain” it will choose New York over Hong Kong for its initial public offering, The Financial Times reports, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation. FINANCIAL TIMES

British Private Equity Firm Plans I.P.O. of Phibro Animal Health  |  The British private equity firm 3i Group is planning to sell a stake in Phibro Animal Health, a maker and marketer of animal health and nutrition products, in an initial public offering that aims to raise as much as $230 million, The Wall Street Journal writes. WALL STREET JOURNAL

Premium Pet Food Firm Preparing for I.P.O.  |  The premium pet food company Blue Buffalo has selected JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley and Citigroup to lead an initial public offering that could come later this year, Reuters writes, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation. REUTERS

No Plans Yet for Palantir I.P.O.  |  Palantir Technologies, a semisecretive data analytics firm backed in part by the C.I.A., said it would not go public in the near future, CNBC reports. CNBC

VENTURE CAPITAL »

Credit Karma, a Credit Score Service, Raises $85 Million  |  The nearly seven-year-old start-up Credit Karma announced a third round of fund-raising on Wednesday. It was led by Google through an investment arm that specializes in late-stage technology companies. DealBook »

Silicon Valley’s Youth Problem  |  In start-up land, the young barely talk to the old (and vice versa). That makes for a lot of cool applications. But great technology? Not so much, Yiren Lu writes in The New York Times Magazine. NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE

Supporting Start-Ups With Connections, Advice and Caffeine  |  The 1 Million Cups program is run by entrepreneurs to help build the start-up community, and local chapters are springing up across the country, The New York Times reports. NEW YORK TIMES

Atomico Adds to Investment in BrazilAtomico Adds to Investment in Brazil  |  The venture capital firm led by Niklas Zennstrom, a co-founder of Skype, has led a new round of financing in Bebestore, an online baby and maternal goods company in Brazil that it has backed before. The new investment indicates that e-commerce remains attractive in Brazil. DealBook »

LEGAL/REGULATORY »

Jefferies in $25 Million Settlement With S.E.C.  |  The Jefferies Group, the investment bank and brokerage firm, agreed to settle accusations by the Securities and Exchange Commission that it failed to supervise traders who lied to investors about the price of mortgage-backed securities. DealBook »

Financial Adviser Sidesteps Prison in Bond-Rigging Case  |  Despite prosecutors’ recommendation for a prison sentence of at least 19 years, David Rubin of CDR Financial Products was sentenced to two years’ probation. DealBook »

Fannie Mae Investors May Be Using Magic CalculatorsFannie Mae Investors May Be Using Magic Calculators  |  The price of Fannie Mae’s preferred stock is up more than tenfold in 18 months, but even cheerful assumptions suggest its business is not worth enough for shareholders to get much, if anything, back after an overhaul, Daniel Indiviglio and Richard Beales write in Reuters Breakingviews. DealBook »

Fed Nominee Has a Long History of Policy Leadership  |  Stanley Fischer, the nominee for vice chairman of the Federal Reserve, has been an influential academic as well as head of the Bank of Israel, The New York Times reports. NEW YORK TIMES

Fed Official Predicts a Soft Landing  |  John Williams, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, answered questions for the Economix blog about the Fed’s retreat from bond buying and forward guidance and said he was optimistic that this time, the Fed will manage to produce a soft landing. NEW YORK TIMES ECONOMIX

China Moves on Banking Reforms  |  Higher interest rates and privately owned banks can help strengthen China’s banking system, according to a New York Times editorial. NEW YORK TIMES