Total Pageviews

Herbalife Shares Fall on Report of Criminal Inquiry

Herbalife shares took a dive late Friday afternoon after a news report linked the diet supplements company to a criminal investigation.

The Financial Times reported that federal prosecutors and the F.B.I. were scrutinizing Herbalife for signs of a fraud, news that seems to have ignited a sell-off in Herbalife shares. The stock finished the day down nearly 14 percent at $51.48.

The hedge fund manager William A. Ackman has staked a billion-dollar bet that the company is a pyramid scheme.

It is unclear whether the F.B.I. investigation has gained much momentum. An official briefed on the matter told The New York Times that the inquiry has continued for several months without Herbalife receiving a subpoena. It is possible, the official said, that the authorities will close the case without taking action against Herbalife.

For its part, Herbalife cast some additional doubt, saying that it was unaware of any criminal inquiry. It would be unusual, but hardly unheard of, for authorities to not contact a company if a monthslong criminal investigation had yielded any major breakthroughs.

“We have no knowledge of any ongoing investigation by the D.O.J. or the F.B.I., and we have not received any formal nor informal request for information from either agency,” Herbalife said in a statement. “We take our public disclosure obligations very seriously. Herbalife does not intend to make any additional comments regarding this matter unless and until there are material developments.”

The criminal inquiry coincides with civil investigations by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Federal Trade Commission. Both regulatory agencies, which face a lower burden of proof than criminal authorities, could fine Herbalife if they conclude its marketing practices amount to a pyramid scheme.

The investigations are focused on Herbalife’s direct-selling business model: The company distributes its diet shakes, supplements and other products through a network of salespeople.

To show that it is operating within the law, Herbalife might have to demonstrate that it sells the majority of its products outside the sales network to consumers. If authorities conclude that the bulk of Herbalife’s revenues are derived from recruiting rather than sales, then the company could face a regulatory action.

Investing in, and betting against, Herbalife has become something of a blood sport for hedge fund managers and billionaire investors, particularly Mr. Ackman and Carl Icahn. For nearly 18 months, the two wealthy investors have squared off over the company, with Mr. Ackman and his firm, Pershing Square Capital Management, wagering the company is an illegitimate pyramid scheme, and Mr. Icahn betting the company will survive all legal scrutiny.

Mr. Ackman has been heavily lobbying the S.E.C. and F.T.C. to open an investigation into Herbalife marketing practices. He has vowed to pledged to take to the fight to the “end of the earth.”

Other hedge fund managers, meanwhile, have been in and out Herbalife shares, even as Mr. Ackman and Mr. Icahn have stood their grounds. The billionaire investor George Soros and Daniel Loeb, chief of the hedge fund Third Point, have money on Herbalife last year by betting that the stock price would rise.

Before Mr. Ackman disclosed in December 2012 that his hedge fund had taken a $1 billion short position against Herbalife, James Chanos, one of Wall Street’s best-known short-sellers had briefly bet on the stock’s decline.

Short sellers make money by borrowing shares and betting a stock will fall in price in hopes of purchasing those shares at that lower price and pocketing the difference after they close out their position. The risk for short sellers is that if a stock continues to rise, their potential losses can become so great they have no choice but to exit the stock.

Shares of Herbalife are about $11 above the price the stock was trading when Mr. Ackman disclosed that he was betting against the company’s fortunes.



For Falcone, No Joy in the Sale of Manischewitz

At Seder tables next week, many Passover celebrants will nosh on matzo and gefilte fish made by the Manischewitz Company.

But for one hedge fund manager, Philip A. Falcone, Manischewitz may leave a bitter taste.

Mr. Falcone â€" chief executive of the hedge fund Harbinger Capital Partners, which until recently owned a controlling interest in Manischewitz â€" suffered a loss when Harbinger sold its position to Sankaty Advisors, an arm of the private equity giant Bain Capital, this week, people close to the matter said.

Manischewitz announced on Tuesday that Sankaty was its new owner, though the company did not disclose the financial terms or other circumstances of the deal.

Sankaty, an investor that specializes in credit, including distressed debt and high-yield bonds, plans to help the maker of macaroons and chicken broth expand beyond the kosher aisle, with the aim of increasing its sales year-round and reducing its reliance on the Passover holiday.

But the process by which Sankaty gained full ownership underscores the challenges that Manischewitz, which racked up losses under Harbinger’s control, continues to face.

The history of Manischewitz under Harbinger and Mr. Falcone was a troubled one from the start. His hedge fund acquired a controlling interest in the company in 2007 from the R.A.B. Food Group, some two years after Harbinger began buying up its debt.

Harbinger paid roughly $60 million for Manischewitz’s debt, according to people briefed on the matter who were not authorized to discuss it publicly. Last year, Harbinger sold the debt to Sankaty for about $55 million in a deal negotiated by Jefferies bankers.

But Harbinger’s losses are probably greater than those numbers suggest. In all, Harbinger sank more than $100 million into Manischewitz during the years it owned the company, and it went though a series of chief executives who were unable to revive its fortunes. The company lost money for much of that time, and in 2008, Mr. Falcone put the investment in a so-called side pocket for hard-to-sell assets that had performed poorly.

The change in ownership from Harbinger to Sankaty can hardly be called a sale, at least not in the conventional sense of the word.

Given the troubled financial condition of Manischewitz, Sankaty was able to convert its debt to equity, according to one person briefed on the matter. Its stake is now 100 percent after the transaction announced this week, according to the company’s new chief executive, Mark Weinsten.

There had been an uneasy relationship between Sankaty and Harbinger after Sankaty came on board, another person briefed on the situation said. Eventually, Sankaty forced Harbinger to walk away from the company.

In announcing the transaction on Tuesday, Manischewitz said it had “secured a strategic investment from Sankaty Advisors.”

Harbinger, for its part, had previously written down the losses on Manischewitz, so it probably wasn’t too difficult for Mr. Falcone to cede control. At one point last year, Harbinger had tried to sell Manischewitz in a process run by the investment bank Houlihan Lokey, one of the people briefed on the matter said, but no sale materialized.

Spokesmen for Harbinger and Sankaty declined to comment.

These days, Mr. Falcone, who was barred from the securities industry for at least five years after settling a securities fraud lawsuit with regulators last summer, is trying to position himself for a comeback, which involves running a publicly traded holding company called the Harbinger Group.

The chief rabbi of Manischewitz, Yaakov Y. Horowitz, said in an interview earlier this week that he had a “very positive feeling” about the company’s new owners. Asked whether he had any role in the deal, he answered no.

“I am profoundly thankful not,” he said.



Weekend Reading: The Other Michael Lewis Backlash

When Michael Lewis rolled out his new book with an appearance on the CBS show “60 Minutes” and an excerpt in The New York Times magazine, the author was praised by literary critics and panned by high-frequency traders.

The speedy condemnation from people made rich by high-speed trading was expected, but Mr. Lewis, one of the most popular business journalists in the country, has also been panned by a number of financial journalists.

While praising the attention that Mr. Lewis has drawn to the problems of high-speed trading, reporters and columnists who cover Wall Street are calling the book old news and questioning Mr. Lewis’s errors, omissions and simplification of the issue.

Andrew Ross Sorkin wrote that Mr. Lewis “reserves blame for the wrong villains.”

Joe Nocera, an Op-Ed columnist for The Times, wrote that the narrative “starts to feel just a little too perfect.”

Mr. Lewis responded to the criticism today in an interview with Salon, saying that “this time I punched Wall Street in” a location that can’t be mentioned in the pages of The Times.

In The Times’s Sunday book review, James B. Stewart, a Times columnist and the author of “Den of Thieves,” punches back.

“There’s really no news in the book,” Mr. Stewart said in an appearance on CNBC. “The news is Michael Lewis discovered high-frequency trading, but Scott Patterson wrote all this, and more, in his 2012 book, ‘Dark Pools.’”

“It’s not a fair book,” Mr. Stewart said. “Goldman Sachs gets slammed, The Wall Street Journal gets slammed for not picking this up, the S.E.C. gets slammed. No one gets to tell their side of the story. One thing I’ve learned as a reporter is that every story gets better when you hear the other side of the story.”

Mr. Stewart’s review finds that:

“A purported contest between good and evil in which all the characters are good quickly becomes dull, especially when the setting is as technical as high-­frequency trading. The traders themselves remain faceless adversaries of Katsuyama and his buddies. Lewis never penetrates their high-tech lairs, or even seems to have tried. Who are these people? What are they like? How do they do what they do? How much money do they make and what do they do with it? And are they really so bad? (For answers to these questions, there’s Scott Patterson’s far more comprehensive and persuasive 2012 book, “Dark Pools: The Rise of the Machine Traders and the Rigging of the U.S. Stock Market.”)”

A look back on our reporting of the past week’s highs and lows in finance.

THURSDAY

Judge Approves SAC Plea, Closing Its Painful Chapter | DealBook »

In I.P.O., a Quest to Satisfy China’s Appetite for Pork | DealBook »

Ending Vitriol, Icahn and eBay Reach a Deal | DealBook »

A Picture Becomes a Weapon in a Bank’s Proxy Battle | DealBook »

A Private Equity Titan With a Narrow Focus and Broad Aims | DealBook »

WEDNESDAY

Detroit Creditor Shows Court Four Offers for City’s Art | DealBook »

Bank of America to Pay $772 Million in Settlement | DealBook »

As Ally Prepares for Offering, Government Cuts Stake | DealBook »

In a First Step to Slim Down, Procter & Gamble Sells Most of Its Pet Food Business | DealBook »

Banks Ease Hours for Junior Staff, but Workload Stays Same | DealBook »

TUESDAY

Banks Ordered to Add Capital to Limit Risks | DealBook »

Choice to Oversee Cohen Fund Has Link to It | DealBook »

Investors’ Appetite for I.P.O.s Seems to Ebb | DealBook »

Your Homework Assignment: Sue the Federal Government | DealBook »

MONDAY

After Debacle With EMI, Investor Finds Solace in the Garden | DealBook »

DealBook Column: Tech Firms May Find No-Poaching Pacts Costly | DealBook »

Citigroup to Pay $1.13 Billion to Settle Securities Claims | DealBook »

Equity Fund Buys Maker of Matzos | DealBook »

Mallinckrodt Pharmaceuticals to Buy Questcor for $5.6 Billion | DealBook »

SUNDAY

Credit Suisse Is Said to Be Facing Double-Barreled Inquiries | DealBook »

Gravity Hits Highflying Tech Stocks | DealBook »

Ex-Chief of Kaplan Aims to Build a Rival | DealBook »

2 Cement Makers Are Said to Agree on Merger Plan | DealBook »

WEEK IN VERSE

‘Best Day of My Life’ | Bank earnings got you down, Jamie? Cheers up with a tune from American Authors and remember that bonus. YouTube »



Weekend Reading: The Other Michael Lewis Backlash

When Michael Lewis rolled out his new book with an appearance on the CBS show “60 Minutes” and an excerpt in The New York Times magazine, the author was praised by literary critics and panned by high-frequency traders.

The speedy condemnation from people made rich by high-speed trading was expected, but Mr. Lewis, one of the most popular business journalists in the country, has also been panned by a number of financial journalists.

While praising the attention that Mr. Lewis has drawn to the problems of high-speed trading, reporters and columnists who cover Wall Street are calling the book old news and questioning Mr. Lewis’s errors, omissions and simplification of the issue.

Andrew Ross Sorkin wrote that Mr. Lewis “reserves blame for the wrong villains.”

Joe Nocera, an Op-Ed columnist for The Times, wrote that the narrative “starts to feel just a little too perfect.”

Mr. Lewis responded to the criticism today in an interview with Salon, saying that “this time I punched Wall Street in” a location that can’t be mentioned in the pages of The Times.

In The Times’s Sunday book review, James B. Stewart, a Times columnist and the author of “Den of Thieves,” punches back.

“There’s really no news in the book,” Mr. Stewart said in an appearance on CNBC. “The news is Michael Lewis discovered high-frequency trading, but Scott Patterson wrote all this, and more, in his 2012 book, ‘Dark Pools.’”

“It’s not a fair book,” Mr. Stewart said. “Goldman Sachs gets slammed, The Wall Street Journal gets slammed for not picking this up, the S.E.C. gets slammed. No one gets to tell their side of the story. One thing I’ve learned as a reporter is that every story gets better when you hear the other side of the story.”

Mr. Stewart’s review finds that:

“A purported contest between good and evil in which all the characters are good quickly becomes dull, especially when the setting is as technical as high-­frequency trading. The traders themselves remain faceless adversaries of Katsuyama and his buddies. Lewis never penetrates their high-tech lairs, or even seems to have tried. Who are these people? What are they like? How do they do what they do? How much money do they make and what do they do with it? And are they really so bad? (For answers to these questions, there’s Scott Patterson’s far more comprehensive and persuasive 2012 book, “Dark Pools: The Rise of the Machine Traders and the Rigging of the U.S. Stock Market.”)”

A look back on our reporting of the past week’s highs and lows in finance.

THURSDAY

Judge Approves SAC Plea, Closing Its Painful Chapter | DealBook »

In I.P.O., a Quest to Satisfy China’s Appetite for Pork | DealBook »

Ending Vitriol, Icahn and eBay Reach a Deal | DealBook »

A Picture Becomes a Weapon in a Bank’s Proxy Battle | DealBook »

A Private Equity Titan With a Narrow Focus and Broad Aims | DealBook »

WEDNESDAY

Detroit Creditor Shows Court Four Offers for City’s Art | DealBook »

Bank of America to Pay $772 Million in Settlement | DealBook »

As Ally Prepares for Offering, Government Cuts Stake | DealBook »

In a First Step to Slim Down, Procter & Gamble Sells Most of Its Pet Food Business | DealBook »

Banks Ease Hours for Junior Staff, but Workload Stays Same | DealBook »

TUESDAY

Banks Ordered to Add Capital to Limit Risks | DealBook »

Choice to Oversee Cohen Fund Has Link to It | DealBook »

Investors’ Appetite for I.P.O.s Seems to Ebb | DealBook »

Your Homework Assignment: Sue the Federal Government | DealBook »

MONDAY

After Debacle With EMI, Investor Finds Solace in the Garden | DealBook »

DealBook Column: Tech Firms May Find No-Poaching Pacts Costly | DealBook »

Citigroup to Pay $1.13 Billion to Settle Securities Claims | DealBook »

Equity Fund Buys Maker of Matzos | DealBook »

Mallinckrodt Pharmaceuticals to Buy Questcor for $5.6 Billion | DealBook »

SUNDAY

Credit Suisse Is Said to Be Facing Double-Barreled Inquiries | DealBook »

Gravity Hits Highflying Tech Stocks | DealBook »

Ex-Chief of Kaplan Aims to Build a Rival | DealBook »

2 Cement Makers Are Said to Agree on Merger Plan | DealBook »

WEEK IN VERSE

‘Best Day of My Life’ | Bank earnings got you down, Jamie? Cheers up with a tune from American Authors and remember that bonus. YouTube »



Alibaba, Continuing Buying Spree, to Acquire Chinese Mapping Firm

The Alibaba Group, the Chinese e-commerce juggernaut, will buy the rest of the mapping and navigation company AutoNavi Holdings that it did not already own, the latest in an acquisition spree ahead of Alibaba’s expected listing in the United States.

Alibaba will pay $5.25 a share to AutoNavi stockholders or $21 per American depositary share, for the 72 percent of the company that it does not already own, AutoNavi said in a statement on Friday. The deal values AutoNavi at $1.5 billion.

Last May, Alibaba had taken a 28 percent stake in AutoNavi, which holds a rare mapping license from the Chinese government covering 2.2 million miles of roads in China.

Alibaba, already China’s largest e-commerce company, has been especially keen to build up its mobile offerings in China, where smartphone use is surging. Integrating AutoNavi into its e-commerce sites would allow Alibaba to deliver location-specific discounts or services to its shoppers, analysts have said, or collect more detailed data on its customers’ spending habits.

Over all, online commerce in China is growing about 60 percent a year, compared to about 10 percent in the United States, Baidu’s chief executive, Robin Li, said at a Beijing news conference last month.

Alibaba has been spending aggressively to fend off rivals in China’s increasingly crowded e-commerce market, like Tencent, whose offerings span media, entertainment, Internet and mobile services. Another rival is Baidu, which owns China’s biggest Internet search engine and is increasingly pushing into Alibaba’s e-commerce turf.

“We are excited to work with the talented team at AutoNavi to further integrate mobile commerce into the lives of our consumers,” Jonathan Lu, Alibaba’s chief executive, said in a statement. “As a result of this transaction, we believe AutoNavi will continue to be a strong player in an increasingly competitive map applications and local services market.”

The deal gives AutoNavi shareholders a 27 percent premium over the company’s closing price on Feb. 7, the last day the company’s shares traded on the market before it announced it had been formally approached by Alibaba.

Alibaba’s latest acquisition is the latest in a string of deals in China and beyond as it prepares for a highly anticipated initial public offering in New York later this year that could value that company at about $200 billion.

In March, Alibaba said it would pay nearly $700 million for a minority stake in a Chinese department store operator. That came 10 days after Alibaba said it had invested $280 million in the Silicon Valley mobile messaging app-maker, Tango.

The AutoNavi deal is expected to close in the third quarter. AutoNavi was advised by Lazard, and Alibaba was by Deutsche Bank.



Judge Approves Pact to End Detroit Swap Deal

DETROIT â€" A federal judge on Friday approved the city’s latest attempt to extricate itself from some long-term financial contracts that have been costing it tens of millions of dollars a year.

Judge Steven W. Rhodes of United States Bankruptcy Court ruled that Detroit could proceed with a plan to pay $85 million to UBS and Bank of America to terminate the financial contracts, known as interest-rate swaps, that were used to help finance pensions. He had rejected two earlier proposed settlements as too generous to the banks.

Under the terms of the settlement, the two banks agreed to back Detroit’s overall plan of adjustment, which is critical for the city’s push to resolve its bankruptcy by early fall. Municipal bankruptcy rules say that if one class of impaired creditors votes to approve the city’s plan of debt adjustment, the judge may be able to impose the terms forcibly on everybody else. The judge’s decision gives Detroit leverage for settlements with other creditors.

Detroit entered into the swap contracts in 2005, when it tapped the municipal bond market for $1.4 billion to put into its workers’ pension funds. Much of the deal was structured with variable-rate debt, and the swaps were intended to work as a hedge, to protect Detroit if interest rates rose. But rates fell, and under those circumstances, the terms of the swaps called for Detroit to make regular payments to UBS and Bank of America. The swaps cost Detroit about $36 million a year.

The 2005 borrowing also required an unusual structure to avoid violating the city’s legal debt limit. In 2009, the debt was downgraded to junk, putting the city out of compliance with the terms of the swaps. So Detroit restructured the swap obligations, offering the two banks the tax revenue that it received from local casinos as a backstop.

When Detroit declared bankruptcy last summer, it estimated the cost of terminating its swaps at about $345 million. Days before filing its bankruptcy petition, Detroit said Bank of America and UBS had given it a break, so that it would have to pay only about $250 million to cancel the contracts. But other creditors, facing bigger relative losses, complained that the two banks were still getting way too much. They argued, among other things, that the interest-rate swaps were invalid from the beginning because the use of casino taxes for financial hedges is not allowed under state law.

With complaints about the swap payment mounting last December, Judge Rhodes sent the parties back to renegotiate their deal with the help of another federal judge, Gerald E. Rosen, the chief justice for the Eastern District of Michigan. Judge Rosen is the lead mediator of the Detroit bankruptcy, trying to negotiate settlements among Detroit’s more than 100,000 creditors to keep the huge bankruptcy from being mired in endless lawsuits.

Judge Rosen persuaded Bank of America and UBS to agree to a $165 million settlement just before Christmas, but Judge Rhodes rejected that deal, saying it was still too much money. He urged the two sides to try to negotiate a new settlement.



Wells Fargo Posts Strong Earnings

Wells Fargo’s first-quarter results beat Wall Street expectations, as the bank posted stronger-than-expected profits, fueled by lower loan losses and decreasing expenses.

In the first quarter, the bank said on Friday, it earned a profit of $5.9 billion, up 14 percent from the same period in 2013. That amounted to 1.05 cents a share. The results beat analyst estimates of 96 cents a share, as surveyed by Bloomberg.

Still, the bank’s revenue for the quarter fell to $20.6 billion from $21.3 billion in the same period a year ago.

Wells Fargo has been a darling of bank investors since the financial crisis. The lender easily passed the Federal Reserve’s recent stress test and its stock has soared over the past year.

Indeed, the results announced on Friday were the 17th-consecutive quarter that Wells Fargo has reported earnings growth â€" a streak that outpaces many of its peers, according to Barclays.

Wells Fargo’s latest strong results were in sharp contrast to JPMorgan’s disappointing first-quarter earnings, which were also announced on Friday morning.

As the nation’s largest mortgage lender, Wells Fargo is considered a bellwether for the United States housing market. Wells Fargo said it originated $36 billion in mortgages in the first quarter, down about 28 percent from the fourth quarter.

But Wells Fargo said that it was able to increase its overall loan portfolio to $826.4 billion, up $4.2 billion from the same period in 2013. The increase was fueled by growth in commercial real estate and auto loans.

Wells Fargo, based in San Francisco, also depends far less than its peers on fixed-income trading and other traditional Wall Street activities that are under pressure from new regulations. In contrast, JPMorgan reported a large trading slump in the quarter.

“Our solid first quarter results again demonstrated the ability of our diversified business model to perform for our shareholders,” Wells Fargo’s chief executive, John G. Stumpf, said in a statement.

Analysts are also looking at whether the bank can continue to expand its wealth management business to offset some of its diminished mortgage revenue. Brokerage advisory and commission fees at Wells Fargo increased 11.6 percent last year, according to JPMorgan analysts.

In the first quarter, client assets in Wells Fargo’s retail brokerage account increased to $1.4 trillion, up 8 percent from the same period a year ago.

Wells Fargo has a strong brokerage business in the Midwest and smaller cities, obtained through its acquisition of Wachovia in 2008. But analysts say some of the best opportunities for growth may come from Wells Fargo’s home state of California, where the bank has nearly a half-million retail customers who could be signed up for brokerage accounts.

Wells Fargo has also avoided many of the headline-making regulatory issues that have lately ensnared rivals. Citigroup faces questions about a costly fraud in its Mexico unit and JPMorgan faced an array of regulatory entanglements, but Wells Fargo has remained out of the headlines.

When Wells Fargo announced a major management change earlier this month â€" its chief financial officer, Timothy J. Sloan, was stepping down to head the wholesale banking unit â€" investors took the move largely in stride.



Italian Asset Manager Raises $961.5 Million in I.P.O.

LONDON - The Italian asset manager Anima said on Friday that it raised 692.5 million euros, or about $961.5 million, in an initial public offering.

Anima priced its offering near the top of the expected range at €4.20 a share, giving it a market capitalization of €1.26 billion. The company had expected to price its I.P.O. between €3.50 to €4.50 a share.

The asset manager begins trading on the Borsa Italiana on Wednesday. Demand was more than five times the offer.

The offering is the latest in a series of European market debuts this year, fueled in part by private equity firms looking to exit potential companies amid buoyant stock markets.

Anima is owned by the Italian private equity firm Clessidra and the Italian banks Monte dei Paschi di Siena and Banco Popolare di Milano. They are expected to remain shareholders in Anima following the float.

The book runners on the offering are Goldman Sachs, Banca IMI, UniCredit and UBS.



JPMorgan Earnings Fall 18.5% on Slowdown in Trading and Mortgage Lending

JPMorgan Chase reported an 18.5 percent slump in first-quarter earnings on Friday, as the nation’s largest bank grappled with dual challenges: sluggish revenue from trading and lackluster mortgage lending.

Both issues, broadly buffeting the banking industry, damped profits at JPMorgan.

The net earnings of $5.27 billion, or $1.28 a share, came in slightly below Wall Street analysts’ expectations of $1.40 a share on revenue of $24.53 billion.

Revenue dropped to $23.86 billion.

As the nation’s largest bank, JPMorgan has become a kind of bellwether for the broader industry. The lukewarm results on Friday underscored how Wall Street has struggled to recoup the revenue drained from a slowdown in trading. Compounding the problem, revenue from underwriting bonds has also dipped in recent quarters.

At an investor conference in February, JPMorgan executives foreshadowed the slowdown, predicting that revenue from trading would fall by roughly 15 percent from just a year earlier.

Ahead of the earnings, some bank analysts expected the trading woes to be aggravated as the nation’s biggest banks adapt to new rules on derivative trading.

For JPMorgan, the results also pointed to just how expensive it has been for the bank to win some kind of peace with Washington. All told, JPMorgan has paid roughly $20 billion in just the past 12 months to resolve a spate of government investigations.

Jamie Dimon, the bank’s chief executive, discussed the steep price of reconciliation in his annual letter to shareholders. He also emphasized that negotiating settlements â€" including a $13 billion agreement with government authorities over the sale of mortgage securities in the years before the financial crisis â€" while trying to reduce risk, has been “painful” and “nerve-racking.”

In fact, in the third quarter of last year, the hefty legal costs led JPMorgan to report its first quarterly loss ever under Mr. Dimon’s leadership.

Part of the slowdown came from a slowdown in revenue from fixed-income trading, which fell roughly 26 percent to $3.76 billion from $4.75 billion a year earlier.

Still, Mr. Dimon has continued to sound an optimistic tone, emphasizing that the bank has worked to move beyond its legal problems. With those settled, Mr. Dimon has said the bank and its senior executives can focus on further expanding the businesses.

“JPMorgan Chase had a good start to the year, given there were industrywide headwinds in markets and mortgage,” he said in a statement on Friday.

JPMorgan’s earnings also contained a number of bright spots, including an increase in deposits, along with an uptick in auto loans. Auto loans grew by 3 percent, to $6.7 billion from $6.5 billion a year earlier. Private banking was another rosy area for the bank, with revenue rising to $1.5 billion, up 4 percent from the same period last year.

Still, the strength of those businesses could not completely offset the continued decline in trading revenue and mortgage refinancing, which had once been a particularly robust source of profit for JPMorgan and its rivals.

Now, the heady days of refinancing seem distant. Rising interest rates, coupled with an increase in housing prices, have damped homeowners’ appetite to refinance. Mortgage loan originations also dropped to $17 billion, down 68 percent from a year earlier, and 27 percent from the previous quarter.

Analysts have winced at the mortgage slowdown. In a note earlier this month, for example, analysts from Guggenheim Securities said that even an uptick in home purchases last quarter could not make up for the steep drop in revenue from mortgage refinancing.

To help deal with the tough lending landscape, JPMorgan has worked to whittle down expenses. Noninterest expenses dropped 5.1 percent, to $14.64 billion, from the same period a year earlier.

JPMorgan has also pruned some its highest-risk businesses, including the so-called correspondent banking, in which the bank relies on foreign institutions to process financial transactions overseas. To fortify its money laundering controls, JPMorgan has hired an additional 13,000 employees since 2012 to handle regulatory issues and compliance â€" a push that Mr. Dimon emphasized in his annual letter on Wednesday.

Beyond slashing expenses to bolster profit, JPMorgan has worked to bring in more from its asset-management business. As part of that push, JPMorgan wooed more customers. Total client assets in that business were up 10 percent. Still, JPMorgan reported that net income for the business fell to $441 million from $487 million in the same period last year, reflecting higher noninterest expenses.



Morning Agenda: A Miss for JPMorgan

JPMORGAN EARNINGS FALL 18.5%  |  JPMorgan Chase reported an 18.5 percent slump in first-quarter earnings on Friday, as the nation’s largest bank grappled with dual challenges: sluggish revenue from trading and lackluster mortgage lending, Jessica Silver-Greenberg writes in DealBook. Both issues, broadly buffeting the banking industry, damped profits at JPMorgan.

The net earnings of $5.27 billion, or $1.28 a share, came in slightly below Wall Street analysts’ expectations of $1.40 a share on revenue of $24.53 billion. Revenue dropped to $23.86 billion.

SAC’S FINAL CHAPTER, MAYBE  |  “In the span of a week, Steven A. Cohen’s investment firm changed its name, hired a former federal prosecutor and became a felon,” Matthew Goldstein and Ben Protess write in DealBook. On Thursday, a federal judge approved the firm’s plea deal that resolved criminal insider trading charges and required a $1.2 billion penalty. “The defendants committed very serious financial crimes,” the judge told a packed courtroom, adding that “these crimes were clearly motivated by greed.”

The approval closes a searing chapter in the 22-year history of Mr. Cohen’s once-mighty hedge fund. Now, the 57-year-old investor is hoping for a less litigious transition for his firm, as it becomes a so-called family office, rechristened Point72 Asset Management, that will manage about $9 billion of his own fortune. Federal authorities privately acknowledge that additional charges against SAC Capital Advisor employees are unlikely unless new evidence surfaces.

Mr. Goldstein and Mr. Protess write: “But to shake fully its tainted past â€" and steer clear of the spotlight â€" Mr. Cohen’s firm will have to do more than plead guilty and change its name. And for Mr. Cohen, who has not been criminally charged despite spending the better part of a decade under investigation, a few legal hurdles remain before he can exhale.” Mr. Cohen still faces a civil action from the Securities and Exchange Commission, and, authorities say, the Federal Bureau of Investigation also continues to examine a handful of stocks for signs of insider trading at SAC.

MARKETS HIT BY TECH SELL-OFF  |  Investors on Thursday dumped Internet, biotechnology and other fast-growing companies at a staggering pace, dragging down the rest of the stock market and calling to mind painful memories of the dot-com bust in 2000, Hiroko Tabuchi writes in The New York Times. The worry is that a driver of economic growth â€" stock market wealth and the creation of new companies â€" may be losing steam.

The sell-off was sharpest in highflying technology stocks; the Nasdaq composite index plunged 129.79 points, or 3.1 percent, on Thursday, its biggest drop since 2011. Other industries also felt the tumult, with the Dow Jones industrial average slumping 1.62 percent, and the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index falling 2.09 percent. On Friday, global equities slipped to a two-week low, as the Wall Street sell-off spread to Asia and Europe. The anxiety threatens to put a chill over the market for initial public offerings and has called into question whether the sell-off will be short-lived or translate into a broad-based weakness.

ON THE AGENDA  |  Wells Fargo reports first quarter earnings at 8 a.m. The producer price index for final demand is out at 8:30 a.m. The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan consumer sentiment index for April is released at 9:55 a.m. The International Monetary Fund and World Bank spring meetings begin in Washington. Blake Irving, the chief executive of Go Daddy, is on CNBC at 11:45 a.m.

A PRIVATE EQUITY TITAN’S UNCONVENTIONAL TACTICS  |  “One of the best-performing private equity firms of the last 15 years doesn’t have a big name like K.K.R., Blackstone or TPG,” David Gelles writes in DealBook. “But Vista Equity Partners, a firm with $8 billion under management that deals exclusively in the unglamorous business of enterprise software, has managed to beat the titans of private equity at their own game.”

Much of Vista’s success can be traced to the unconventional tactics of its hands-on chief executive, Robert F. Smith, who has delivered investors a 31 percent average annual rate of return since co-founding Vista in 2000. One person said the firm has acquired more than 110 companies and never lost money on an investment. But despite his impeccable track record, Mr. Smith, one of the few black private equity titans, says he has faced an uphill battle to get some investors on board, which he believes is because of his race.

Mr. Smith’s success has inspired him to take a counterintuitive approach to managing investments and hiring. He usually adds sales and engineering talent instead of stripping out costs from the companies he acquires. He looks for workers who have leadership potential and analytical abilities instead of candidates with Ivy League degrees and impressive internships. And while many buyout shops strive for diverse portfolios, Vista specializes in software and focuses on a diverse work force. “It is all part of Mr. Smith’s push to repair the damaged reputation of his industry,” Mr. Gelles writes.

Mergers & Acquisitions »

Investor Group Offers to Buy Bitcoin Exchange Mt. Gox for One Bitcoin  |  A group of investors with ties to Hollywood is offering to buy the Bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox for one Bitcoin, or about $400, The Wall Street Journal writes, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation. The purchase must be approved by a Japanese bankruptcy court.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

IBM to Acquire Marketing Tech Firm  |  The company said on Thursday that it had agreed to acquire Silverpop, a privately held marketing technology company based in Atlanta.
DealBook »

Former Maker Studios Chief Sues to Block Disney Takeover  |  Danny Zappin, the co-founder and former chief executive of Maker Studios, and three other former executives have filed a lawsuit to prevent a shareholder vote to approve a takeover bid by the Walt Disney Company, The Wall Street Journal writes. Disney agreed in March to acquire Maker Studios, an online video company, for $500 million.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Amazon Buys ComiXology  |  Amazon extended its domain over the world of words on Thursday by acquiring ComiXology, the giant digital comics platform, the Bits blog writes. The terms of the deal were not disclosed.
NEW YORK TIMES BITS

Etihad-Alitalia Talks Said to Heat Up  |  Etihad Airways, based in Abu Dhabi, is expected to present a letter of intent for its potential investment in the loss-making Italian airline Alitalia within the next few days after negotiations gained traction following a meeting with Italy’s premier, Reuters reports, citing an unidentified person familiar with the situation.
REUTERS

INVESTMENT BANKING »

JPMorgan’s Masters Said to Have Angled to Lead Unit in Sale  |  When JPMorgan Chase set out to sell its commodities unit, Blythe Masters, who led the group, is said to have made it clear that she wanted to go along with the business and continue as its chief, Bloomberg News writes, citing an unidentified person familiar with the situation. Ms. Masters announced her departure from the bank after a $3.5 billion sale of the unit was announced last month.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

Co-operative Bank Cancels Bonuses as It Posts Steep Loss  |  The Co-operative Bank said Friday that it would cancel 4.97 million pounds, or about $8.38 million, in bonuses for current and former executives and other employees as the British lender reported a £1.3 billion pretax annual loss.
DealBook »

Michael Lewis: By the Book  |  Michael Lewis’s new book, “Flash Boys,” is a must-read on Wall Street these days, but what’s his favorite book about the financial industry? In The New York Times Book Review, he says it is “Reminiscences of a Stock Operator,” by Edwin Lefèvre, which was first published in the 1920s.
NEW YORK TIMES

Sacrificing Sense for Speed in Markets  |  Today’s stock markets operate at blinding speed, using bewilderingly complicated processes untempered by common sense or accountability, Floyd Norris writes in the High & Low Finance column.
NEW YORK TIMES

Taking a Risk, Investors Snap Up Once-Shunned Greek Debt  |  After investors flocked to its five-year debt offering, Athens said it was a sign that the country was succeeding in turning its economy around, The New York Times writes.
NEW YORK TIMES

The Cubs of Wall Street  |  Chris Hayes reviews Kevin Roose’s new book, “Young Money,” in The New York Times Book Review.
NEW YORK TIMES

PRIVATE EQUITY »

Brazil’s Private Equity Fund-Raising Set to Rise  |  Fund-raising for private equity investments in Brazil appears ready to pick up after two lean years, The Wall Street Journal reports. A number of major firms, including the Carlyle Group, have begun raising capital to invest in Brazilian companies, according to unidentified people familiar with the situation.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Deoleo Board Agrees to Sell Company to CVC Capital  |  The board of Spain’s Deoleo agreed to sell the company to the private equity firm CVC Capital Partners, ending a monthslong and often politically charged search for a buyer of the world’s biggest olive oil company, The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Private Equity Helps Drive Subprime Car Loans  |  Private equity firms and hedge funds have backed a number of new car finance companies in the last three years, contributing to an increase in subprime car loans, The Financial Times writes.
FINANCIAL TIMES

HEDGE FUNDS »

Ending Vitriol, Icahn and eBay Reach a Deal  |  Under the terms of their deal, Carl C. Icahn will withdraw his bid for two seats on the company’s board and end his demand that it sell a minority stake in its PayPal unit to shareholders.
DEALBOOK

Icahn’s Feud With eBay Generated Noise, but Slight Bump for Shares  |  In his monthslong battle with eBay, Carl C. Icahn accused the company of failing to generate bigger returns for shareholders. But since the day before eBay announced that Mr. Icahn had acquired a stake, its stock has risen about 2 percent.
DealBook »

Icahn May Someday Win, and eBay Will Spin Off PayPalIcahn May Someday Win, and eBay Will Spin Off PayPal  |  EBay has not ruled out a spinoff forever. More talk from Carl Icahn â€" albeit behind closed doors â€" and heightened scrutiny from independent board members and shareholders could bring the day closer, Robert Cyran of Reuters Breakingviews writes.
DealBook »

One Way to Wage a Proxy Fight  |  An activist investor used a photo of a bank’s chairman napping at a shareholder meeting in an attempt to influence an election for board members.
DealBook »

Qatar Investment Executive Said to Start Hedge FundQatar Investment Executive Said to Start Hedge Fund  |  Kamel Maamria’s new fund will be one of relatively few based and focused on the Middle East, with offices in both Qatar and Dubai.
DealBook »

I.P.O./OFFERINGS »

Shares in Ally Dip in Their DebutShares in Ally Dip in Their Debut  |  Shares in Ally ended 4 percent below the company’s initial public offering price. Underwriters had already priced the stock sale at the low end of an expected range.
DealBook »

ADP to Spin Off Dealer Services Business  |  Automatic Data Processing said on Thursday that it planned to spin off its dealer services business, which focused on marketing for auto dealers and manufacturers, into an independent, publicly traded company, The Wall Street Journal writes. The company said that the separation would occur in the form of a tax-free spinoff to shareholders and that it expected to receive at least $700 million in proceeds.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Zendesk Files for $150 Million I.P.O.  |  Zendesk, the start-up cloud services company, has filed to raise about $150 million in an initial public offering on the New York Stock Exchange, ReCode writes.
RECODE

VENTURE CAPITAL »

Tachyus, a Data Start-Up for Oil Industry, Raises $6 Million From Founders FundTachyus, a Data Start-Up for Oil Industry, Raises $6 Million From Founders Fund  |  The start-up is an anomaly of sorts in Silicon Valley because it aims to create an array of sensors and applications to help oil and gas producers better record and analyze their wells. Many new businesses focus on high-technology products for the Internet or green technology.
DealBook »

Food Delivery Start-Up Munchery Raises $28 Million  |  Munchery, a food delivery start-up, has raised $28 million in Series B funding led by Sherpa Ventures, The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

Jafco Ventures Raises Largest Fund Yet  |  Jafco Ventures has raised an oversubscribed fifth fund at $260 million, its largest fund yet, The Wall Street Journal reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL

LEGAL/REGULATORY »

Federal Regulators Advise Banks to Protect Their Systems From Internet Security Flaw  |  A group of regulators including the Federal Reserve, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency say banks should upgrade their systems to protect customer information.
DealBook »

R.B.S. Agreement Opens Door for Future DividendsR.B.S. Agreement Opens Door for Future Dividends  |  The Royal Bank of Scotland, which is 81 percent owned by the British government, has agreed to retire a financial structure that entitled the government to preferred dividends.
DealBook »

G.M. Suspends 2 Engineers in Switch Inquiry  |  The company said the two were placed on paid leave as an “interim step” in its investigation of ignition problems that persisted for years, The New York Times reports.
NEW YORK TIMES

Bank of England Holds Key Rate at 0.5%  |  The Bank of England on Thursday left a key interest rate unchanged at a record low, as Britain’s economy continues to recover and inflation remains in decline, The New York Times reports.
NEW YORK TIMES

A Delaware Court Flexes a Never-Tested Muscle  |  The Delaware Court of Chancery, known as the nation’s business court, has now done something it had apparently never done before in its 222 years â€" issue an arrest warrant.
DealBook »



Co-operative Bank Cancels Bonuses as It Posts Steep Loss

LONDON - The Co-operative Bank said Friday that it would cancel 4.97 million pounds, or about $8.38 million, in bonuses for current and former executives and other employees as the British lender reported a £1.3 billion pretax annual loss.

The bank said the bonuses wouldn’t be paid as a result of a combination of claw backs of deferred compensation that had yet to be paid to former executives and performance benchmarks not being met.

The embattled lender was forced to seek a capital infusion from a group of bondholders last year to avoid a collapse after it discovered a £1.5 billion capital shortfall. Last month, the lender said it would have to bolster its balance sheet by another £400 million.

On Friday, Co-operative Bank warned that it did not expect to make a profit in 2014 or 2015 and said that it was focused on reshaping its business and shoring up its capital position.

“During 2013, the task for the new management was to keep the bank alive.” Niall Booker, the bank’s chief executive, said in a statement.

The capital raising “prevented the bank from going into resolution, preserving the bank for our customers and protecting jobs without cost to the taxpayer. However, there continue to be significant issues, which need to be resolved,” he said.

To avoid collapse last year, the bank agreed to a debt restructuring in which a 70 percent stake was relinquished to a group of bondholders, including the hedge funds Silver Point Capital and Aurelius Capital Management.

After the debt restructuring, Co-operative Group, its parent company, is the bank’s largest shareholder, with a 30 percent stake.

The Co-operative Group traces its roots to the Rochdale Society of Equitable Pioneers, a cooperative company formed in 1844 that paid a share of its profit back to its members as a dividend.

The group provides a range of products and services, including operating grocery stores, funeral homes, pharmacies, an insurance company, legal services providers and the banking unit.

The Co-operative Bank’s financial difficulties can be traced back to its acquisition of Britannia Building Society, a local rival, in 2009. The merger left the bank with a large pool of delinquent commercial real estate loans.

A deal to buy part of the Lloyds Banking Group’s branch network collapsed last year, shortly before Cooperative Bank’s financial problems came to light.

The £1.3 billion pretax annual loss for 2013 included credit impairments of £516 million, conduct and legal risk costs of £412 million and £148 million write down related to information technology.

On an after-tax basis, including the proceeds of the capital infusion, the bank posted a loss of £748.9 million in 2013, compared with a loss of £509.1 million in the prior year.

On Friday, the bank also said it would seek to recoup compensation paid to Paul Flowers, its former chairman and a Methodist minister, saying he was found to be in breach of agreement under which he left the bank.

In November, The Mail on Sunday, a British tabloid, reported that Mr. Flowers was covertly filmed counting out money to buy illegal drugs just days after he appeared before Parliament to answer questions about his leadership at the bank.

Mr. Flowers, who left the bank in June, has apologized for his “stupid and wrong” behavior. He has been suspended by the church and was arrested as part of a police inquiry in November.

Mr. Flowers was to be paid £95,000 in three installments after he left the lender, Cooperative Bank said in its annual report. Following the first payment, Mr. Flowers was found to be in breach of the agreement, the bank said. No further payments have been made and the bank said it is seeking to recoup the first installment.

After joining the bank as C.E.O. in June, Mr. Booker received £1.7 million in compensation in his first six months on the job, including a base salary of £699,000.