Nelson Peltz board swap leaves unresolved conflict 2 Feb 2022 The activist gave up a board seat at Invesco to take one at rival Janus Henderson, while holding stock in both fund managers. If the companies decide to merge, Peltz is a conflicted broker with inside knowledge. Even a good suggestion becomes unnecessarily controversial.
Capital Calls: Julius Baer, Siltronic 2 Feb 2022 Concise views on global finance: A slip in the Swiss wealth manager’s shares is an incentive for M&A sooner rather than later; strong results suggest the German wafer maker can expand despite Berlin’s failure to approve a 4.4 bln euro takeover by Taiwan’s GlobalWafers.
UBS’ Morgan Stanley impression could use more work 1 Feb 2022 CEO Ralph Hamers’ job is to get a valuation closer to the U.S. group’s 2.5 times tangible book value multiple, compared with his $68 billion bank’s 1.2. New buybacks help, but the missing ingredient is growth. Investors are understandably sceptical that Hamers can change that.
Capital Calls: Blackstone, German chips, Guy Hands 27 Jan 2022 Concise views on global finance: The $140 bln group braces for falling asset values and rising interest rates; Berlin sends the wrong signal by ignoring a 4.4 bln euro offer for wafer maker Siltronic; Britain seeks to reverse the financier’s lucrative 1996 housing deal.
ESG fervour is weathering its first big storm 27 Jan 2022 Despite a U.S. greenwashing probe, Germany’s 7 bln euro asset manager DWS is seeing further green inflows. Investors’ zeal for funds that tick ethical boxes is outdoing concerns about their fine print and performance relative to dirty funds. Yet the worries aren’t going away.
Viewsroom: Credit Suisse chair, Unilever’s GSK bid 20 Jan 2022 As António Horta-Osório quits the Swiss lender after less than a year, Liam Proud explains what happened and offers career advice. And Unilever’s 50 bln pound offer for the pharma giant’s consumer unit puts both CEOs on the spot, say Aimee Donnellan and Dasha Afanasieva.
Larry Fink’s pragmatism is awkward but lucrative 18 Jan 2022 The BlackRock CEO rejected criticisms that stakeholder capitalism is “woke”, while backing natural gas. The danger for Fink is that he occupies a no man’s land position on culture war hot topics. His consolation is that $10 trln of assets suggest investors are down with that.
Capital Calls: Dan Loeb’s gadfly circles again 18 Jan 2022 Concise views on global finance: The U.S. activist’s activists up the ante with call for independent director.
Invesco walks very fine line on Sony-Zee deal 7 Jan 2022 The U.S. fund won key concessions in the $7 bln entertainment merger, but it’s also mixed up in a lawsuit over the Indian broadcaster blocking its call for a shareholder vote. Court defeat would set an ugly governance precedent. Victory, however, risks blowing up the transaction.
What our columnists got right and wrong in 2021 31 Dec 2021 We look back at a year as unpredictable as its predecessor. We foresaw an M&A surge, even if some of the deals we called for, like Tesla buying Daimler, failed to materialize. But we nailed a few biggies, like Grab’s moment in the limelight, inflation’s return and mRNA’s success.
Capital Calls: Enel’s payments punt 24 Dec 2021 Concise views on global finance: The 70 bln euro utility is paying up to 361 mln euros for a relatively pricey punt on fellow Italian payments firm Mooney.
Capital Calls: Nikola’s SEC collision damage 21 Dec 2021 Concise views on global finance: The electric-truck maker is paying the U.S. securities watchdog $125 million. It’s a big dent but, given the stakes for SPACs and their targets, may only mildly discourage cheerleaders from taking the step from hype into fraud.
Capital Calls: UBS, Pfizer, Peloton 13 Dec 2021 Concise views on global finance: An appeals court has reduced a penalty for the Swiss bank by 60% for tax wrongdoings; the U.S. pharma group is buying a drugmaker to bolster its post-pandemic growth options; real risks are a bigger threat to the bike-app company than fake ones.
Capital Calls: Deutsche and DWS, Big Four 9 Dec 2021 Concise views on global finance: The German bank’s ownership of the asset manager looks less appealing after an ESG reporting scandal riled U.S. regulators; a record $167 bln in revenue will soothe the accountancy giants’ breakup pains.
Aramco pipeline is net win for BlackRock and Saudi 7 Dec 2021 The oil giant is raising $15.5 bln by selling 49% of the cash flow from its gas pipes to the fund giant and partners. Backing from blue-chip investors helps Riyadh unlock international finance. For BlackRock, a 10%-plus return compensates for supporting a major carbon emitter.
China property market faces more nationalisation 6 Dec 2021 Evergrande, the country’s most indebted developer, has admitted it might formally default. With $10 bln in property bonds maturing in January alone, officials are under pressure to keep the sector from collapsing. The most expedient solution is to put more housing in state hands.
Capital Calls: Zoom, U.S. jobs 3 Dec 2021 Concise views on global finance: The video-conferencing service is investing in Amex Global Business Travel as part of a $5.3 bln SPAC deal; in the United States, only 210,000 positions were added in November, but the unemployment rate fell.
Bruised UK fund manager throws pricey counterpunch 2 Dec 2021 After years of struggling to hang onto assets, Abrdn is buying consumer platform Interactive Investor for 1.5 bln pounds. It brings growth and a chance to steal share in personal savings. The challenge is ensuring its expensive new bauble shines inside a stodgy asset manager.
Capital Calls: Dan Loeb, Daily Mail 2 Dec 2021 Concise views on global finance: The billionaire activist swats away his own gadfly investor; the UK tabloid’s controlling Rothermere family sweetens its take-private offer, to the presumable delight of the campaigners on its news desk.
ESG ratings’ big dogs may need to learn new tricks 23 Nov 2021 IOSCO wants better oversight in the murky world of sustainability grading. The global standards-setter hasn’t called for much that the likes of MSCI can’t live with. But the direction of travel suggests incumbents will lose out as data becomes more sophisticated and transparent.