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Crime Inquiry Said to Open on Citigroup


Just as Citigroup was putting a troubled past of taxpayer bailouts and risky investments behind it, the bank now finds itself in the government’s cross hairs again.

Federal authorities have opened a criminal investigation into a recent $400 million fraud involving Citigroup’s Mexican unit, according to people briefed on the matter, one of a handful of government inquiries looming over the giant bank.

The investigation, overseen by the F.B.I. and prosecutors from the United States attorney’s office in Manhattan, is focusing in part on whether holes in the bank’s internal controls contributed to the fraud in Mexico. The question for investigators is whether Citigroup â€" as other banks have been accused of doing in the context of money laundering â€" ignored warning signs.

The bank, which also faces a parallel civil investigation from the Securities and Exchange Commission’s enforcement unit, hired the law firm Shearman & Sterling to lead an internal inquiry into the fraud, said the people briefed on the matter, who spoke only on the condition of anonymity. At a meeting last month, the bank’s lawyers presented their initial findings to the government.

The bloom of activity stems from Citigroup’s disclosure in February that its Mexican unit, Banamex, uncovered an apparent fraud involving an oil services company.

The disclosure â€" that at least one Banamex employee processed falsified documents that helped the oil services company obtain a loan that cannot be repaid â€" generated immediate interest from federal authorities. But the decision by the F.B.I. and prosecutors to open a formal investigation, a move that has not been previously reported, has now officially drawn a faraway crime to Citigroup’s doorstep.

The case represents another setback for the bank, which has also come under fire from regulators in Washington. Last week, the Federal Reserve rejected Citigroup’s plan to increase its dividend. The rebuke embarrassed the bank and raised questions about the reliability of its financial projections.

The scrutiny coincides with Citigroup’s recent announcement that it faces a separate, and perhaps more threatening, investigation from federal prosecutors in Massachusetts. The prosecutors, who have sent subpoenas to Citigroup, are examining whether the bank lacked proper safeguards against clients laundering money. Citigroup, the people briefed on the matter said, has hired the law firm Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison to handle that case, which stems from the prosecutors’ suspicion that drug money was flowing through an account at the bank.

Together, the developments threaten to complicate Citigroup’s relationships with government authorities, who had previously lost faith in the bank after it required two bailouts and came to epitomize Wall Street’s role in the financial crisis. While Citigroup’s chief executive, Michael L. Corbat, has repaired ties to regulators using a blend of contrition and self-accountability, the latest investigations could test those improvements.

Still, the government scrutiny could be short-lived. Citigroup has not been accused of wrongdoing, and prosecutors might ultimately close the cases without extracting fines or imposing charges, which typically come only if wrongdoing was pervasive.

And Citigroup is sharing the spotlight with banks like JPMorgan Chase, whose missteps, including a $6.2 billion trading loss in London, make its own problems seem arguably manageable by comparison.

A Citigroup spokesman declined to comment. In a letter to shareholders last month, Mr. Corbat said: “We continue to investigate what took place in Mexico and are working to identify any areas where we need to strengthen our controls through stronger oversight or improved processes.”

Spokesmen for both the F.B.I. in New York and Preet Bharara, the United States attorney in Manhattan, declined to comment.

In a speech this week, however, Mr. Bharara emphasized the importance of investigating not only individual bankers and traders, but also the Wall Street firms that employ them.

“Effective deterrence sometimes requires that institutions be punished, because sometimes it is the institution that has failed,” he told a conference of Wall Street lawyers.

At first glance, Citigroup appeared to be the victim of the fraud involving the Mexican oil services company Oceanografía. After all, the bank lost millions of dollars.

But the F.B.I. and prosecutors, the people briefed on the matter said, are questioning whether Citigroup was equal parts victim and enabler.

For one, it is unclear whether the wrongdoing at Citigroup was actually limited to a single Banamex employee, as early reports indicated. The authorities, according to the people briefed on the matter, are investigating whether the scheme involved co-conspirators at the bank’s offices in the United States.

Prosecutors also tend to weigh whether an episode was isolated or illustrative of a broader problem. In the case of Banamex, the fraud was the latest in a series of questionable loan deals for the Citigroup unit. Bank employees say that Banamex, which accounts for 13 percent of Citigroup’s revenue, undergoes the same level of oversight as any other business arm. But others inside the bank say that the Mexican unit has always had some degree of autonomy from New York.

And even if Oceanografía defrauded Citigroup â€" and the fraud was indeed an “isolated incident,” as the bank has said â€" Citigroup may have lacked the proper controls to thwart the scheme at its inception.

Under the law, banks must report suspicious activity and set up compliance programs to prevent money laundering and other illegal activity. When banks fail to do so, it could amount to a criminal or civil violation, depending on the severity of the problem. For a breakdown to be criminal, prosecutors would typically need to show that the bank willfully ignored warning signs of the fraud.

With the focus on bank controls, the Banamex case and the separate money-laundering investigation in Massachusetts echo other recent Wall Street investigations. Prosecutors have claimed that lax controls enabled drug trafficking, money laundering and business deals with blacklisted countries like Iran and Cuba. In 2012, federal prosecutors penalized HSBC for turning a “blind eye to money laundering that was happening right before their very eyes.”

The HSBC case, defense lawyers say, provided a template for prosecutors to go after not just a bank’s actions, but its inaction as well.

In January, Mr. Bharara’s office announced a criminal case that extracted a $1.7 billion penalty from JPMorgan Chase over accusations that it ignored warning signs about Bernard L. Madoff’s Ponzi scheme. Mr. Madoff’s firm used JPMorgan as its primary bank for more than two decades.

At Banamex, Oceanografía became one of the bank’s largest corporate clients.

Under a short-term lending arrangement, Banamex would advance money to Oceanografía, whose existence hinged almost entirely on government contracts. Banamex issued the loans with the understanding that Oceanografía had received contracts from the state-owned oil monopoly Pemex. Once the work was completed, Pemex would repay the loan to Banamex.

But this year, Mexican authorities suspended Oceanografía from obtaining additional government contracts for several months. Shortly after, Banamex discovered a fraud.

There was valid documentation for $185 million of work, Citigroup said, but Banamex had advanced Oceanografía a total of $585 million. Some of Oceanografía’s invoices, Citigroup said, “were falsified to represent that Pemex had approved them. A Banamex employee processed them.”

Mexican authorities, including lawmakers and the attorney general, have directed their own investigations into the fraud.

Citigroup has said it has worked with the Mexican authorities “to initiate criminal actions” that may allow it to recover some of the missing money.

“We are exploring every available option to recoup the misappropriated funds and we will be relentless in pursuing their recovery,” Mr. Corbat said in a memo to employees. “All will be held equally responsible and we will make sure that the punishment sends a crystal-clear message about the consequences of such actions.”

Jessica Silver-Greenberg contributed reporting.



A Financial Center Is Envisioned on a Muddy Tract in Southern China

There isn’t much to see in Qianhai today except for a tract of muddy, mostly undeveloped land that has been reclaimed from the sea in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen, near the border with Hong Kong.

A gleaming meeting hall built by the local government to host potential investors sits largely marooned, surrounded by dusty plots of new land that run for miles in every direction. The steady clang of passing dump trucks fills the air.

Six years from now, officials here envision, Qianhai will be a thriving, international finance district in Shenzhen that will stand shoulder to shoulder with Wall Street, the City of London or Hong Kong’s Central District. The local government anticipates a working population of 650,000 people generating annual gross domestic product of around $25 billion in Qianhai by 2020 â€" plans that call for total investment of nearly 400 billion renminbi, or about $65 billion.

But Wall Street and its counterparts didn’t become global financial centers by way of government fiat. For China, the challenge is fundamental; gently easing the state’s grip on the financial system after decades of heavy-handed control. It’s a bold blueprint, but, so far, not much more than that.

Qianhai is one of more than 10 newly created or proposed special zones, including the better-known Shanghai free trade zone, where China plans to experiment with a new wave of financial overhauls.

The changes, first outlined in November by President Xi Jinping, serve as a recognition of the dangerous imbalances created by the investment-led growth model that has powered China since the financial crisis. Policy makers want to deflate these risks by reining in the nation’s reliance on cheap debt, modernizing the state-controlled financial system and refocusing the economy on domestic consumption.

One crucial component of this strategy is to ease government currency controls, allowing a freer flow of Chinese money into foreign stock, bond and property markets and granting overseas investors more access to domestic markets. Here, Qianhai hopes to play a major role.

It is a risky proposition. Many nations have been thrown into financial turmoil after moving too quickly to loosen currency controls and open their financial markets.

Some analysts say China’s leaders have little choice. They argue that continuing to rely on credit-fueled investment for growth will only delay China’s day of economic reckoning, raising the risk of even bigger problems down the road.

“Opening the capital account and pushing ahead with overall financial market reform is absolutely crucial for sustaining higher growth rates than the rest of the world,” said Diana Choyleva, the head of macroeconomic research at Lombard Street Research in London. “If they don’t go down the route of reform now, and they get cold feet and go back to just throwing money at the economy to get growth, we are going to have a whopping big financial crisis within a couple of years.”

Analysts have described Mr. Xi’s proposals as the biggest changes to the country’s financial landscape in decades. Officials in Qianhai are fond of pointing out that Mr. Xi’s first trip outside Beijing after taking over as head of the Communist Party in late 2012 was to Shenzhen and Qianhai, where he spoke of national rejuvenation and the pursuit of what he has called the “Chinese dream.”

“The goal of Qianhai is to be a dream factory for the Chinese dream,” said He Zijun, deputy director of the Qianhai Authority, which administers the zone.

Mr. Xi’s southern tour was symbolic. Many Chinese instantly recognized it as a tribute to a famed 1992 trip to Shenzhen by Deng Xiaoping, the paramount leader who in 1978 began China’s transformation into an economic powerhouse. Deng loosened the state’s grip on the economy, using Shenzhen as a petri dish for experiments in freewheeling capitalism.

“For the past 30 years Shenzhen has led the reform and opening up process in China,” Mr. He said. “In the future we hope that Qianhai can continue to be a test ground for further reform and opening up, and we can set an example for all other regions.”

Things are off to a modest start. Beijing gave the green light for Qianhai’s unique status in 2010. Since then, local officials have auctioned several blocks of land. Several banks, including Standard Chartered and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Bank, have opened small branch offices in the district.

Few foreign investors have made major investments in Qianhai so far. But players like Silverstein Properties, the developer of the new towers at the World Trade Center site in New York, are starting to take note.

In January, Silverstein teamed up with a Chinese firm in a winning bid of 13.4 billion renminbi for a plot of land in the district â€" a record for the city of Shenzhen. The developer acquired rights to a 550,000-square-foot site, where it plans to build offices, retail outlets, service apartments and hotels covering a total floor area of nearly five million square feet, more than twice the floor area of the Empire State Building.

“Thanks to its policies, location, transportation access and world-class architecture, I believe that Qianhai will become one of the most successful business districts in the world,” Marty Burger, the chief executive of Silverstein, said in a statement last month.

In an effort to attract the foreign investors needed to fill all those offices, Qianhai officials frequently promote the district’s 15 percent corporate tax rate â€" compared with the 25 percent national rate and 16.5 percent in nearby Hong Kong. But details of how to qualify for tax breaks have yet to be released by the country’s Ministry of Finance, which is concerned about the effect it might have on other Chinese cities, according to Peter Kung, a senior partner responsible for southern China at KPMG.

In Shanghai’s free trade zone, which was officially opened in September, officials have promised a sweeping relaxation of China’s current restrictions on financial activity. In December, the central bank, the People’s Bank of China, issued a 30-point proposal that included floating interest rates and allowing foreign involvement in areas including currency and futures trading and domestic bond sales.

But again, the details, have yet to be announced. Shanghai officials have published a lengthy list of activities and industries that are off-limits in the zone â€" with the implication that if something is not banned, it is allowed. The so-called negative list closely mirrors China’s current restrictions on foreign investment. For example, within the zone, foreign ownership is capped at 49 percent for brokerages and 50 percent for car factories â€" the same as anywhere else in China.

There also appears to be little consensus in China about how companies within these special zones will trade or interact with companies or customers in the rest of the country, or whether they will be permitted to do so at all.

“Whilst they’ll be useful petri dishes for experimenting on open capital accounts and everything else, I think they’ll be pretty limited in terms of how they can operate because you still have to ring-fence the special economic zone,” said Matthew Sutherland, the senior investment director for equities in Asia at Fidelity Worldwide Investment.

Some see bureaucratic infighting as the most likely culprit behind China’s delay. The proposals involve areas covered by at least 10 different Chinese government ministries and regulatory agencies.

“You have different regulators and they all have their vested interests,” said Joseph W. K. Chan, a partner at the law firm Sidley Austin in Shanghai. “The vast majority of them do not see eye to eye; there are turf wars going on all the time.”

Mr. Chan said, however, that recent pronouncements by Shanghai officials suggest that “a lot of the back-room horse trading has already taken place.”

Robert Kung, the China country head at Bank of New York Mellon, said, “The magnitude of this liberalization, this opening up, really depends on how comfortable the government and the regulators feel.”



JPMorgan Executive May Trade Corporate Saddle for a Real One

Blythe Masters is looking forward to taking “some well-deserved time off” when she leaves her job as a top executive at JPMorgan Chase later this year, the bank said in an internal memo on Wednesday.

What she will do with her newfound free time was not disclosed. But it’s a good bet that she will be spending some of it with horses.

In addition to running JPMorgan’s commodities business, Ms. Masters competes in horse shows occasionally and has enjoyed success recently in her equestrian pursuits.

A gelding she owns, Chapeau, came in second on Friday in a show-jumping contest in Wellington, Fla. The horse finished the $20,000 Adequan 7-Year-Old Young Jumper Classic in 30.96 seconds.

It wasn’t the first outing for Chapeau, who was imported to the United States in October 2011. Two years ago, he took the blue ribbon in a $15,000 jumper classic in the same festival.

Ms. Masters, who grew up riding horses in Kent, England, has devoted considerable resources to her hobby. She bought Hermitage Farm in Bedminster, N.J., and trains there, according to an article in September in The Star-Ledger, which described the facility as “both beautiful and practical.”

Its grand prix field spans more than five acres and includes two water jumps and a derby bank, according to its website. The indoor arena has a waxed sand surface and three walls with windows. The tack rooms feature air-conditioning and under-floor heating, while the paddocks are monitored by closed-circuit cameras.

In February 2013, Ms. Masters was honored by Draper Therapies, a maker of animal therapy products, with its Best Foot Forward Award, which “recognizes equestrians in a very unique way for simply bringing a positive spirit and attitude to the shows.”

Ms. Masters at the time was showing All The Lucks, a 7-year-old mare who was recently imported from Ireland.

“She just came to America, so she was a little fresh and a little green,” Ms. Masters said, according to a news release. “But it’s just about having fun!”



A Pivotal Financial Crisis Case, Ending With a Whimper

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Handler, Leucadia’s Chief, Takes Pay Cut in New Role

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Venture Capital’s Need for Secrecy Collides With Public’s Right to Know

California is home to some of the biggest venture capital firms and many of the young companies they invest in. So it is not surprising that the state has been a major battleground in efforts to strike a balance between the venture industry’s need for confidentiality and the public’s right to know about investments made by public agencies.

A recent ruling by a California state court offers one option â€" allowing venture capital firms and public agencies to control the amount of information they disclose. But is it the best solution? Probably not.

First, a little background. The venture capital business is actually a fairly confidential one. A venture capital fund typically raises money by privately offering limited partnership interests. The fund then invests in young companies that are privately offering preferred stock.

Until a company goes public in an initial public offering, both the fund and the company have many reasons to maintain confidentiality. Young companies are fragile. Their most valuable assets may be intangible, like business plans and technical insights. Struggling to attract customers, business partners and additional employees, they can be destroyed by premature publicity or even rumor.

Venture funds have their own reasons to crave confidentiality. It is notoriously difficult, for example, to establish the value of private company stock in their portfolios. Different venture funds that have invested in the same private company may attribute wildly different values to their holdings. Publication of those valuations could wreak havoc on young companies.

Because it can take a portfolio company five to seven years or more to generate liquid returns for a venture capital fund, it often takes a decade to determine whether a particular fund is a “success.” Indeed, most venture funds spend years officially “under water” because they must recognize operating expenses and early losses, while gains from successful investments come much later. Prematurely publishing information about the investment performance of a specific venture fund can damage the reputation of its parent venture capital firm, making it more difficult for the firm to conduct business.

Perhaps more insidiously, publication of venture fund performance can motivate fund managers to seek positive returns as quickly as possible by selecting investments with a shorter path to liquidity. This could sacrifice the longer-term, higher potential investments that represent what venture capital is all about.

If both portfolio companies and their venture capital backers are motivated by similar desires for confidentiality, what’s the rub? It’s this. A large portion of the money invested in venture capital funds comes from public agencies, and these agencies are governed by myriad laws intended to protect the public’s right to know.

In 2003, a university employees’ union successfully sued the Regents of the University of California for access to an array of statistics on the university’s venture capital and other private fund investments.

Reaction by the venture industry was swift. Many of the most prominent and successful venture capital firms announced that they would no longer accept capital from California public agencies. This, argued the University of California, the California Public Employees’ Retirement System and other public agencies, was a blow to public employees, retirees, students and others who have benefited from strong returns on venture investments.

In response, the California Legislature amended the law governing public disclosure â€" the California Public Records Act. Broadly speaking, the amendment divided information into two buckets. Information relating to specific portfolio companies was exempted from public disclosure, while information relating to specific funds was not.

In practical terms, this meant that a public agency must annually disclose the name of each venture fund in which it invests, the amount invested, the fees paid to fund managers and the fund’s overall investment performance.

The amendment was a major step forward. It protected young portfolio companies and there has been little debate about public agencies’ disclosure of nonperformance information on their venture capital investments â€" like the names of the funds, amounts invested and fees paid.

Nevertheless, almost no one in the venture industry is happy about the law’s requirement that each fund’s performance data be disclosed each year. Indeed, the websites of California public agencies that disclose this data are replete with warnings that the information is unreliable and misleading.

A public agency can disclose only information to which it has access. To minimize disclosure of fund performance data, a number of venture firms and public agencies have entered into contractual arrangements that limit the amount of data the agencies receive about fund performance. These arrangements were a major issue in a recent lawsuit brought by the Reuters news agency against the Regents of the University of California.

Reuters argued that the Public Records Act prohibits public agencies from agreeing to forgo performance data that (if received) must be publicly disclosed. In December, the California Court of Appeal sided with the Regents, holding that the Public Records Act imposes no obligation on public agencies to acquire data they believe they can do without.

But does the court’s ruling mean we have now reached a stable balance? Probably not.

For starters, the current situation is genuinely perverse. Public agencies, seeking to invest in the best venture capital funds, are forfeiting the right to receive data that will help them understand and manage their investments. It’s easy to see how the next lawsuit may assert that public agencies breached their fiduciary duties by making investment decisions based on inadequate information.

The simplest solution would be to eliminate mandatory public disclosure of fund performance data. Yet it is difficult to reconcile this with the public’s need to hold government officials accountable for the performance of public agency investment programs.

A more attractive middle ground would allow public agencies to combine the performance data of multiple private investments and disclose only the aggregated result. This would allow the public to hold agency officials accountable for overall performance, while protecting individual venture capital funds from premature and misleading disclosure of their investment data. Given the inherent contradictions of the current situation, this seems an experiment worth conducting.

Jonathan Axelrad is a partner in the Silicon Valley office of the law firm Goodwin Procter, and co-head of its venture capital fund formation practice.



Why Would Virtu Want to Go Public Anyway?


It’s a good thing Virtu Financial doesn’t really need to go public.

The “technology-enabled market maker” is delaying its initial public offering.  While Virtu may be different, too much of what it does sounds similar to the high-frequency trading that’s suddenly in the spotlight.

It’s reasonable to ask why a highly profitable private trading firm aspires to be publicly traded at all. It doesn’t need capital. Virtu disclosed profit of $182 million on total revenue of $665 million last year. And between 2011 and 2013 it paid out nearly $700 million in distributions to its owners, thanks to both business cash flow and the proceeds of borrowing.

Nor does founder Vincent Viola, formerly chairman of the New York Mercantile Exchange, seem to have much inclination to share control, with four classes of shares - part of a complex corporate structure - helping to concentrate voting power in his hands.

The answer may be that private equity firm Silver Lake Partners, which invested about $250 million in Virtu in 2011, wanted a profitable exit route and I.P.O. investors seemed gung-ho enough to invest on Mr. Viola’s coattails at a high enough price. Valued at the ballpark 20 times earnings multiple that attaches to flourishing exchanges in the United States, Virtu could be worth more than $3.5 billion.

Fate has intervened with the publication of Michael Lewis’ new book with its claim that U.S. stock markets are “rigged” by high-frequency traders operating at light speed. Virtu distances itself from the momentum and order signal-based trading that Mr. Lewis highlights as particularly troubling. Instead, Mr. Viola’s firm exploits variability in the gap between bid and offer prices for securities, minimizing risk to the extent that it has lost money on only one day since 2009.

Yet huge volumes, pennies-per-trade profit and electronic activity in at least 10,000 securities and other instruments, 210 trading venues and 30 countries make Virtu seem like any high-frequency trader, a business which isn’t widely understood anyway. KCG, the combination of Getco and the former Knight Capital - which suffered a big loss in 2012 as the result of a technological glitch before the merger last year - boasts a trailing price-to-earnings ratio below 10 times. Holding off on the I.P.O. could prevent Virtu’s valuation sliding in that direction, especially as there’s no rush.

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



Lyft Raises $250 Million From Alibaba, Third Point and Others

Lyft, one of the big players in the nascent-but-booming ride-sharing industry, said on Wednesday that it had raised $250 million from a group that includes the Chinese e-commerce titan Alibaba Group and the investment firm Third Point.

In a blog post, Lyft said that the new investors also included Coatue Management and existing backers like Andreessen Horowitz, Founders Fund and Mayfield. (In an interview with Fortune, the company’s chief executive, Logan Green, conceded that the start-up was valued at roughly around $700 million before the latest investment.)

Lyft is part of the increasingly popular ride-share industry, functioning effectively as a sort of dispatch network for regular drivers use their own cars to pick up passengers. Its main rival is Uber, which investors like TPG have already valued at $3.5 billion.

But while Uber carries an air of crisp professionalism â€" beyond its UberX ride-sharing service, it also offers users Town Cars and S.U.V.’s â€" Lyft promotes itself as a bit quirkier. Its drivers hang big fuzzy pink mustaches from their cars’ front grilles and often greet customers with a fist bump.

That has helped the company grow rapidly: In its blog post, the start-up said that it now operates in 30 cities, up from just two a year ago.

Now it has drawn the attention of more big-name investors. Coatue, a hedge fund, has backed popular start-ups like the messaging service Snapchat and the last-minute hotel bookings provider Hotel Tonight.

Alibaba has invested in a number of American start-ups from which it hopes to glean new insights into online commerce, even as the Chinese Internet giant readies for its own initial public offering.

And Third Point, while best known for the shareholder activism practiced by its founder, Daniel S. Loeb, has made venture capital investments for roughly 10 years.



Giving a Debtor a Big Club Against Lenders

A federal district court’s opinion in Meridian Sunrise Village v. NB Distressed Debt Investment Fund Ltd. is one of the most important recent decisions for distressed debt investors and loan investors generally. It is also one you haven’t probably heard of. Indeed, but for a brief mention in one of Bill Rochelle’s invaluable columns on Bloomberg Law a few weeks back, I would have missed it myself.

The case involves a relatively small loan, of about $75 million, with U.S. Bank as lead agent and lots of others taking subsidiary roles in lending the money to the debtor. The loan agreement looks to be pretty standard for anyone who has seen a few syndicated loan agreements. But it nonetheless seems to have thrown the federal courts in Washington State for a bit of a loop.

The problems began when Bank of America sold its piece of the loan to a distressed debt fund. The debtor normally had a right to approve transfers of the loan - subject to the usual rule that consent could not be unreasonably withheld, whatever that means - but the right to consent went away when the debtor was in default. Thus, the debtor being in Chapter 11 would seem to remove any barriers to Bank of America’s move.

But the bankruptcy court, and then the district court, disagreed. The problem, as they saw it, was that the loan agreement limited loan transfers to “financial institutions.” And the courts in Washington tell us that hedge funds are not “financial institutions” â€" something that may come as a bit of a surprise to the drafters of the Dodd-Frank Act.

The court’s argument that financial institutions should be interpreted as entities that make loans almost proves the point, as hedge funds are increasingly making direct loans themselves. And did the court really mean to say that a mutual fund or an exchange traded fund could not buy a stake in this loan?

The clause in question might have more reasonably been interpreted to prohibit assignment of the loan to individual investors. But the Washington courts did not seem to be too worried about the broader context in which this loan exists.

The opinion further faults the distressed debt fund for selling part of the stake it got from Bank of America to another fund. Apparently, the courts viewed this as an attempt to manipulate the Bankruptcy Code’s voting rules, which turn on getting approval by creditors in a class “that hold at least two-thirds in amount and more than one-half in number of the allowed claims of such class.”

Of course, if the debtor is going to issue debt that generally can be transferred, this sort of thing is bound to happen. One doubts that the courts would have objected if a bondholder sold half of its holdings to another creditor, but somehow the result seemed to change once we were talking about a loan agreement.

If the debtor could show the loan traded in smaller increments deliberately to manufacture a block, that’s one thing, but instead the court blithely adopts a blanket prohibition on breaking up original positions in loans. Something lenders might want to keep in mind next time they make a loan to a Washington-based company - the ability to trade the loan has been greatly diminished.

The opinion of the United States District Court in Tacoma is problematic for many other reasons as well. For example, we are told that the lender group “forced Meridian into a nonmonetary default” based on the debt coverage covenants. Others would call that the terms of the deal, without any “force” whatsoever, but I digress.

Why is the opinion important? Because you can expect to see it in a Chapter 11 case soon. After all, this is an appellate decision that gives the debtor a great big club against its lenders. Why not try to use it?

Stephen J. Lubben is the Harvey Washington Wiley Chair in corporate governance and business ethics at Seton Hall Law School and an expert on bankruptcy.



High-Frequency Trading Firm Virtu Is Said to Delay I.P.O.

The high-frequency trading firm Virtu Financial has decided to postpone its initial public offering by at least a week, amid a storm of negative attention over its industry’s business model, two people briefed on the matter said on Wednesday.

The company made the decision on Tuesday night, one of these people said. It now may wait until later this month to begin pitching its upcoming I.P.O. to prospective investors.

Since the release on Monday of “Flash Boys,” a new book by Michael Lewis, the high-frequency trading industry has been on the defensive. Mr. Lewis and the book’s subject, Brad Katsuyama, who runs an upstart trading platform, appeared on television several times in the last few days to declare that the stock market is rigged in favor of high-frequency traders, who use computer algorithms to buy and sell shares in milliseconds.

The stock of another trading company, KCG Holdings, fell 3.3 percent on Tuesday. KCG is the result of the merger between the Knight Capital Group and Getco. Shares of the Nasdaq OMX Group, which sells services to high-frequency traders, were down 3 percent, while shares of the IntercontinentalExchange Group, which owns the New York Stock Exchange, were off 2.4 percent.

Virtu was getting ready for its Wall Street debut when the book came out. In March, when the company first filed a prospectus for an I.P.O., Wall Street was stunned to learn that Virtu had lost money on just one day in nearly five years.

That near-perfect record did not go unnoticed by the New York attorney general, Eric T. Schneiderman, who is intensifying a broad investigation into the business of high-frequency trading. He is taking a hard look in particular at services the stock exchanges offer to high-speed traders.

In its I.P.O. filing, Virtu said that one regulator, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, was looking into its “participation in certain incentive programs offered by exchanges or venues” during a period from 2011 to 2013. The company said it did not believe it ran afoul of laws or regulations.

Bloomberg News earlier reported on the I.P.O. delay.



High-Frequency Trading Firm Virtu Is Said to Delay I.P.O.

The high-frequency trading firm Virtu Financial has decided to postpone its initial public offering by at least a week, amid a storm of negative attention over its industry’s business model, two people briefed on the matter said on Wednesday.

The company made the decision on Tuesday night, one of these people said. It now may wait until later this month to begin pitching its upcoming I.P.O. to prospective investors.

Since the release on Monday of “Flash Boys,” a new book by Michael Lewis, the high-frequency trading industry has been on the defensive. Mr. Lewis and the book’s subject, Brad Katsuyama, who runs an upstart trading platform, appeared on television several times in the last few days to declare that the stock market is rigged in favor of high-frequency traders, who use computer algorithms to buy and sell shares in milliseconds.

The stock of another trading company, KCG Holdings, fell 3.3 percent on Tuesday. KCG is the result of the merger between the Knight Capital Group and Getco. Shares of the Nasdaq OMX Group, which sells services to high-frequency traders, were down 3 percent, while shares of the IntercontinentalExchange Group, which owns the New York Stock Exchange, were off 2.4 percent.

Virtu was getting ready for its Wall Street debut when the book came out. In March, when the company first filed a prospectus for an I.P.O., Wall Street was stunned to learn that Virtu had lost money on just one day in nearly five years.

That near-perfect record did not go unnoticed by the New York attorney general, Eric T. Schneiderman, who is intensifying a broad investigation into the business of high-frequency trading. He is taking a hard look in particular at services the stock exchanges offer to high-speed traders.

In its I.P.O. filing, Virtu said that one regulator, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, was looking into its “participation in certain incentive programs offered by exchanges or venues” during a period from 2011 to 2013. The company said it did not believe it ran afoul of laws or regulations.

Bloomberg News earlier reported on the I.P.O. delay.



Deutsche Börse Unit Is Subject of U.S. Criminal Investigation

Deutsche Börse said on Wednesday that its Clearstream unit was the subject of a criminal investigation into potential violations of United States money laundering laws and sanctions against Iran.

The German stock exchange said the unit was cooperating with an investigation by the office of Preet Bharara, the United States attorney for the Southern District of New York.

“The investigation is in a very early stage and our U.S. counsels are currently analyzing the situation,” Clearstream said in a statement on Wednesday. “Investigation is a search process in a criminal proceeding. It is not a prosecution. Clearstream is currently not subject to prosecution.”

Shares of Deutsche Börse declined 3 percent, to 56.44 euros, or about $77.92.

In recent years, the Manhattan district attorney’s office and the Justice Department both have aggressively pursued banks and others who have facilitated transactions by Iran and other countries or groups facing sanctions in the United States.

Last year, the Lebanese Canadian Bank, a defunct Beirut bank, agreed to forfeit $102 million as part of a settlement of accusations by the Justice Department that it helped launder hundreds of millions of dollars tied to the militant group Hezbollah.

In 2012, the British bank HSBC agreed to pay $1.9 billion and entered into a so-called deferred prosecution agreement, in which it would avoid prosecution if committed no further wrongdoing in the next five years.

American officials said the bank allowed hundreds of millions of dollars in transactions from countries facing United States sanctions from the mid-1990s to about 2006, including Iran and Libya. HSBC said at the time that its legal issues were the result of its lack of a centralized structure globally.

In 2009, the Lloyds Banking Group agreed to pay $350 million in fines and forfeiture to settle claims by the Manhattan district attorney and the Justice Department that allowed Iranian and other clients to access the American banking system by removing identifying information from wire transfer requests, a process known as “stripping.”

Clearstream, based in Luxembourg, provides post-trading and settlement services - namely delivering cash and securities between trading parties. It settles more than 250,000 transactions a day.

On Wednesday, Clearstream said Mr. Bharara’s office had recently issued a grand jury subpoena seeking data on any property belonging to Iran or its central bank that was possibly being held by Clearstream, as well as services or acts undertaken by the unit for Iran’s benefit.

Clearstream said would comply with the laws of all relevant jurisdictions.

Reuters reported on Tuesday that the grand jury subpoena was issued in a separate civil lawsuit in New York related to the 1983 bombing of a military barracks in Beirut that killed 241 American servicemen.

That lawsuit, filed in 2010, is seeking billions of dollars from financial institutions that the family members of victims claim facilitated the flow of money between Iran and terrorist groups.

In January, Clearstream agreed to pay $152 million to settle civil allegations by the Treasury Department that its United States account was used as a conduit to hold about $2.8 billion in securities for Iran’s central bank between December 2007 and June 2008.



Morning Agenda: Stemming Departures at SAC

Steven A. Cohen is putting pressure on his traders to try to keep his once-powerful hedge fund together as it awaits a judge’s decision next week on its guilty plea to securities fraud charges, Matthew Goldstein writes in DealBook. Mr. Cohen is aiming to curtail a slow but steady departure of top portfolio managers by pressing those who remain to sign two-year contracts that would bind them to him until the end of 2016.

“The push by Mr. Cohen to lock up as many top traders as possible is an indication that the future success of what will become a firm managing only the 57-year-old investor’s considerable fortune is still uncertain,” Mr. Goldstein writes. Some employees are not convinced that the firm will remain a powerhouse stock trading shop once it becomes a family office, managing mostly $9 billion of Mr. Cohen’s money.

The effort to get as many as half of the firm’s roughly 90 portfolio managers to sign two-year contracts is causing some consternation at the firm. Some view the two-year contracts as an aggressive move by Mr. Cohen to limit the options of his top traders. But others say that SAC is simply doing what is necessary to keep its talent in place and ensure that those who leave early honor the terms of their contracts.

YOU SAY YOU WANT A REVOLUTION  |  “If the last three decades revolutionized the information and telecommunications industries, the next three may upend the basic tenets of finance: currency, credit and banks, as well as payment and transmission systems,” Andrew Ross Sorkin writes in DealBook’s spring special section on the future of money. In recent years, there have already been hints of an impending overhaul, including the emergence of Bitcoin, the adoption of peer-to-peer lending businesses and the introduction of the payment system Square.

Mr. Sorkin writes: “What happens when you no longer need a bank to provide capital? Instead, investors and those looking for credit â€" individuals and businesses â€" meet online. Is that a real possibility? What are the regulatory ramifications? Are we more interconnected or less? Where will people store money in the future? And will it be safe?”

The financial industry â€" and Silicon Valley investors â€" may be fixated on virtual currencies and credit card technologies, but don’t declare cash dead quite yet, Michael Corkery writes in DealBook. There are now more greenbacks coursing through the American financial system than at any time in recent history. Since January 2006, the amount of United States currency in circulation rose about 64 percent, to $1.2 trillion.

But divining the future of money from the explosive growth of cash is not so easy. Consumers are not necessarily spending those bills. And in fact, as the total amount of dollars in the system increases, signs of cash transactions are declining. Though the practice is not as widespread in the United States because of costs, people across the globe are now using smartphones to make payments for transit, food, clothing or even to pay bills, Chad Bray and Reuben Kyama write in DealBook. Still, while many are entranced by the idea of a cashless society, some institutions, including the Salvation Army, are trying to figure out how to adapt, Gregory Schmidt writes in DealBook.

KEEPING IT SAFE  |  Paying with plastic has been pretty standard everywhere since the 1970s. But after security breaches at Target late last year led to the loss of personal data from as many as 110 million customers, the financial industry is “racing to adopt technologies that will alter that decades-old ritual,” Michael J. de la Merced writes in DealBook.

Efforts to bolster card security were underway well before hackers broke into the systems of Target, Neiman Marcus, Michaels and other store chains, but these breaches have injected new urgency into adopting newer technology. For their part, credit card companies and issuers say their are working to make the system as consumers know it obsolete through smart chips and advanced computer programming.

Mr. de la Merced writes: “Ultimately, while physical cards will remain in use for some time, many in the industry predict plastic as the primary way to pay will give way to digital wallets embedded in smartphones, tablets and other devices.”

Bitcoin backers, too, are being spurred to act in the face of security issues and concerns about new regulations, Nicole Perlroth writes in DealBook. The Bitcoin system itself is protected by strong cryptography, but thieves have stolen hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of coins by exploiting weaknesses in private key storage systems and hundreds of millions more from exchanges.

“Consumer confidence in and adoption of new technologies â€" especially regarding money â€" is highly dependent on security, or at least the public’s perception of security. To that end, Bitcoin enthusiasts, cryptographers and security researchers are putting renewed focus on security and self-policing,” Ms. Perlroth writes.

ON THE AGENDA  |  The ADP private payroll report for March is out at 8:15 a.m. Gallup’s job creation index for March is out at 8:30 a.m. Factory orders for February are out at 10 a.m. Dennis P. Lockhart, president of the Atlanta Fed, gives a speech on the economic outlook at 12:30 p.m. in Miami. The House Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations holds a hearing at 10 a.m. entitled “Allegations of Discrimination and Retaliation within the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.” The House Committee on Small Business holds a hearing at 1 p.m. entitled “Bitcoin: Examining the Benefits and Risks for Small Business.”

GOLDMAN WEIGHS SALE OF MARKET-MAKING UNIT  |  Goldman Sachs is exploring a sale of its designated market-maker unit, which it is valuing at about $30 million, after paying $6.5 billion for it in 2000, Rachel Abrams writes in DealBook. Goldman acquired the unit as part of its acquisition of the trading firm Spear, Leeds & Kellogg. Once known as specialists, market makers, which facilitate trading by buying and selling shares of public companies, have largely been phased out by technology.

WHERE’S SATOSHI NAKAMOTO?  |  Bitcoin was created by an anonymous computer programmer, or group of computer programmers, known only as “Satoshi Nakamoto.” People have been making educated guesses to try to unmask the real Satoshi since Bitcoin appeared in 2009. Can you spot him?

 

Mergers & Acquisitions »

Strong Start in Deal-Making  |  Led by announced acquisitions like Comcast’s $45 billion bid for Time Warner Cable, the dollar volume of mergers worldwide rose 35 percent in the first three months of 2014 from the period a year earlier. It was the strongest start for deals since 2011. DEALBOOK

Owner of American Lawyer Said to Put Publisher Up for SaleOwner of American Lawyer Said to Put Publisher Up for Sale  |  The owner of American Lawyer, one of the mainstay magazines for the legal industry, has put the magazine’s publisher up for sale, a person briefed on the matter said on Tuesday. DealBook »

China’s Cofco to Buy Majority Stake in Noble Agriculture Unit  |  Cofco, a huge state-owned foodstuffs conglomerate, has agreed to pay $1.5 billion for a 51 percent stake in Noble Agri as part of a push to meet China’s demands for food security. DealBook »

Chinese Ambition With a Hefty Price TagChinese Ambition With a Hefty Price Tag  |  There are risks to Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation’s deal for the Wing Hang Bank, an economic slowdown in China and lending excesses in Hong Kong among them, notes Peter Thal Larsen of Reuters Breakingviews. DealBook »

Apple in Talks to Buy Chip Designer  |  Japan’s Renesas Electronics Corporation is in talks with Apple and other potential buyers of a stake in a smartphone display chip unit, Reuters writes, citing an unidentified person familiar with the situation. REUTERS

Timberwolves Owner Plans to Buy Minneapolis Newspaper  |  Glen Taylor, who owns the Minnesota Timberwolves basketball team, has signed a letter of intent to buy The Minneapolis Star Tribune, the newspaper announced on Tuesday. ASSOCIATED PRESS

INVESTMENT BANKING »

JPMorgan Names Co-Heads of Equity Capital Markets for the AmericasJPMorgan Names Co-Heads of Equity Capital Markets for the Americas  |  Michael Millman and Jeff Zajkowski, specialists in initial public offerings, will report to Liz Myers, the firm’s global head of equity capital markets. DealBook »

Charles Keating, Key Figure in the 1980s Savings and Loan Crisis, Dies at 90  |  Charles H. Keating Jr., who went to prison and came to symbolize the $150 billion savings-and-loan crisis a generation ago after fleecing thousands of depositors with regulatory help from a group of United States senators known as the Keating Five, has died, The New York Times writes. He was 90. NEW YORK TIMES

Wells Fargo Names New C.F.O.  |  Timothy J. Sloan, 53, is leaving the C.F.O. post to head Wells Fargo’s wholesale banking group, and John R. Shrewsberry, 48, currently head of Wells Fargo Securities, will become the new chief financial officer. DealBook »

High-Frequency Trading Book Riles Tempers on CNBCHigh-Frequency Trading Book Riles Tempers on CNBC  |  The new book by Michael Lewis has inflamed passions across Wall Street, stoking a debate over the business of high-frequency trading. On Tuesday, it also made for some explosive TV. DealBook »

Russia to Retaliate Over JPMorgan Action  |  Russia has threatened to retaliate against United States diplomatic missions after JPMorgan Chase blocked a money transfer from a Russian embassy, The Financial Times reports. FINANCIAL TIMES

PRIVATE EQUITY »

Energy Future Reorganization Plan Said to Almost Wipe Out Owners  |  Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, TPG Capital and Goldman Sachs Capital Partners, the firms that acquired Energy Future Holdings in the biggest leveraged buyout ever, would be left with as little as 1 percent of the equity in the company in a reorganization plan being discussed, Bloomberg News writes, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation. BLOOMBERG NEWS

Alarm.com Owners Exploring Possible Stock Offering  |  The private equity firm ABS Capital is considering a stock market debut for Alarm.com, a company that sells home security systems controlled by smartphone applications, The Financial Times writes, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation. The firm is also weighing a sale of the company. FINANCIAL TIMES

Credit Card Maker CPI Weighs Sale  |  The private equity firm Tricor Pacific Capital, the owner of CPI Card Group, is considering its exit options, including a possible sale, The Wall Street Journal reports, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation. WALL STREET JOURNAL

HEDGE FUNDS »

Corporate Lobbyists Assail Tax Overhaul They Once Cheered  |  The undisputed winners of a legislative battle over the nation’s tax code are the lobbying shops, which often work to simply preserve the status quo, The New York Times writes. NEW YORK TIMES

Half of New York’s Tech Workers Lack College Degrees, Report Says  |  A commissioned report shows how important the technology sector has become to New York City’s economy, The New York Times writes. NEW YORK TIMES

Investors Accuse 12 Banks of Foreign Exchange Price Manipulation  |  Investors, including a variety of pension funds and hedge funds, have accused 12 banks of conspiring since January 2003 to manipulate the foreign exchange market, Reuters writes. The private litigation was filed on Monday night in United States District Court in Manhattan. REUTERS

I.P.O./OFFERINGS »

GrubHub Raises Price Range for I.P.O.GrubHub Raises Price Range for I.P.O.  |  The online food ordering service GrubHub, familiar to legions of office workers, says it expects to price its stock at $23 to $25 a share. DealBook »

Applus Services Seeking to Raise $414 Million in I.P.O.  |  The Spanish testing and certification company Applus Services says its public flotation will include a primary offering of new shares by the company and a secondary offering of existing shares by its current shareholders. DealBook »

Virtu Said to Delay Planned I.P.O.  |  Virtu Financial, the high-speed trading firm that announced plans last month to sell shares in an initial public offering, has delayed the deal, Bloomberg News writes, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation. The delay comes amid increased scrutiny of high-frequency traders driven in part by Michael Lewis’s new book, “Flash Boys.” BLOOMBERG NEWS

VENTURE CAPITAL »

Inside the (Smaller) Bank Branch of the FutureInside the (Smaller) Bank Branch of the Future  |  Technology that was once the stuff of James Bond movies and spy novels may soon turn up in local bank branches. DealBook »

Essay: The Real Competition to Virtual CurrencyEssay: The Real Competition to Virtual Currency  |  Bitcoin and its peers have so far failed to gain wide acceptance because the current monetary system works very well and is itself adaptable. DealBook »

Tech Titans Are Vying to Be Your Pocketbook  |  Companies like Google, Amazon, PayPal and Apple are looking for the route to dominance over future alternatives, both real-world and virtual, to cash and credit cards. DealBook »

Consumers Are Still Seeing Seams in the Mobile WalletConsumers Are Still Seeing Seams in the Mobile Wallet  |  Despite a proliferation of digital payment technology from Google, Square, Venmo and others, most smartphone users are still spending the old-fashioned way. DealBook »

A Skype Founder and a Famous Smoothie Maker Swap Tales in London  |  As the London’s technology scene rises, many are trying to think of ways to avoid the kind of tensions that have arisen between the haves and have-nots in the San Francisco Bay Area, the Bits blog reports. NEW YORK TIMES BITS

Buzz Points Raises $19 Million  |  Discover Financial Services is backing Buzz Points, a loyalty rewards start-up, filling out a $19 million round to finance the company as it aims to enter new markets across the country, The Wall Street Journal reports. WALL STREET JOURNAL

LEGAL/REGULATORY »

British Regulator to Use ‘Big Data’ in Antitrust Enforcement  |  The Competition and Markets Authority of Britain plans to use “big data” to identify industries where traditional players are stifling competition from online rivals. The new regulator officially began operation on Tuesday. DealBook »

G.M. Takes a Step Toward Families  |  Mary Barra, General Motors’ chief, announced the hiring of Kenneth Feinberg, who oversaw compensation funds after 9/11 and the BP oil spill, The New York Times reports. NEW YORK TIMES

At Hearing, Caterpillar Defends Tax Practices  |  Officials of Caterpillar sparred with members of a Senate panel on Tuesday, defending more than a decade’s worth of tax practices that put most of the company’s profits out of reach of United States tax authorities, The New York Times writes. NEW YORK TIMES

European Finance Ministers Approve New Loans for Greece  |  Pointing to signs that Greece is emerging from its economic crisis, euro zone finance ministers approved the release of 8.3 billion euros in rescue loans, The New York Times writes. NEW YORK TIMES

World Bank to Lift Lending to Developing Countries  |  The institution announced that it would increase its capacity to lend to middle-income countries like China, India and Brazil from $15 billion to as much as $28 billion a year, The New York Times reports. NEW YORK TIMES

Unemployment Malaise Lingers in Euro Zone  |  While the jobless rate ticked higher in France and set a record in Italy, it stood at 11.9 percent in the wider 18-nation currency bloc, unchanged from January’s revised figure, The New York Times writes. NEW YORK TIMES



Applus Services Seeking to Raise $414 Million in I.P.O.

LONDON - The Spanish testing and certification company Applus Services said on Wednesday that it planned to raise as much as 300 million euros, or about $414 million, in an initial public offering in Spain.

The public flotation will include a primary offering of new shares by the company, which markets itself under the name Applus+, and a secondary offering of existing shares by its current shareholders, it said.

The company’s current investors include Spanish savings banks and funds advised by the private equity firm The Carlyle Group.

“Today’s announcement marks a major milestone in Applus+’ corporate evolution,” said Fernando Basabe, the Applus chief executive. “Looking ahead, we see exciting opportunities across our markets for further growth and are very well placed to continue to benefit from favorable structural growth trends as well as industry consolidation.”

Applus, based in Barcelona, provides safety testing and other certification services to the energy, automotive, industrial and infrastructure sectors. The company posted revenue of €1.6 billion in 2013.

The company employs about 19,000 people in more than 60 countries.

Proceeds from the I.P.O. will be used to reduce the company’s debt. Applus intends to list on stock exchanges in Barcelona, Bilbao, Madrid and Valencia.