Apple monopoly ruling is small slice of humble pie 13 May 2019 A group of iPhone owners is free to sue Tim Cook’s company over their claim it charges too-high prices for apps in its store, the top U.S. court has ruled. A lawsuit could still take years. Even so, small defeats like this can add up. There are many ways to peel an Apple.
Deutsche Bank chair faces shareholder reckoning 29 Apr 2019 Failed merger talks with Commerzbank are another blot on Paul Achleitner’s seven-year tenure at the German lender. A vote against Bayer bosses suggests investors are becoming more vocal. With his own May 23 judgment day looming, Achleitner has a tough job arguing for continuity.
Holding: Comic sues, but joke’s on copyright law 23 Apr 2019 Heard the one about the writer who says talk-show host Conan O’Brien stole his schtick? It’s the latest case of creative types, from Radiohead to Oracle, refusing to share clever but derivative ideas. Excessive legal protections that stifle innovation are no laughing matter.
T-Mobile and Sprint can bear antitrust pain 16 Apr 2019 The telecom firms have yet to convince U.S. officials over their $88 bln merger. They may have to make cuts, like selling T-Mobile’s prepaid unit or spectrum. Bigger rivals Verizon and AT&T are already diversifying. Unless trustbusters get draconian, combining is the best bet.
Apple and Qualcomm face up to mutual need 16 Apr 2019 The smartphone maker and chips firm ended a two-year fight over royalties, with a cash payment to Qualcomm and a licensing agreement. Apple can’t risk being stuck with second-rate chips, and Qualcomm has huge revenue at stake. At first blush, both sides benefit from the truce.
UniCredit outperforms U.S. sanctions-hit benchmark 16 Apr 2019 Italy’s biggest bank by assets is paying $1.3 bln to settle a U.S. probe, and its German arm will enter a guilty plea. That’s a similar slap to previous European bank settlements. But with the fine less than UniCredit provisioned for, it will actually boost the bank’s capital.
Zambia case puts corporate ethics guff on notice 11 Apr 2019 Britain’s Supreme Court says Vedanta can be sued in London for pollution offences in the African state. Multinationals have tended to trumpet corporate social responsibility at head office, while ignoring sins at subsidiary level. Whatever the case’s outcome, that will change.
Roundup crisis could snarl Bayer in activist weeds 29 Mar 2019 The chemicals maker has lost 40 bln euros in value since U.S. juries said its glyphosate herbicide causes cancer. With science on Bayer’s side, delaying any settlement makes sense. But the longer the German group’s shares remain low, the more vulnerable it looks to interlopers.
Swedbank CEO exit still leaves iceberg of problems 28 Mar 2019 The Swedish lender has dismissed CEO Birgitte Bonnesen shortly before its annual meeting. That was almost inevitable given allegations that the lender was involved in money laundering in the Baltics. The problem for investors is that the scandal will last longer than her tenure.
Wirecard’s relief surge has gone too far 26 Mar 2019 The 15 billion euro payment group’s shares rose more than a quarter after a review found no evidence of any misconduct that would have a material financial impact. Its valuation is now uncomfortably close to sector stalwarts Visa and Mastercard. A bigger discount is merited.
Hong Kong fumbles its China extradition fix 21 Mar 2019 The city may exclude white-collar crimes from a mooted deal to exchange suspects with the mainland, to assuage the business community’s concerns. Unfortunately, such an awkward compromise would only confirm the tension between the financial hub’s needs and Beijing’s ambitions.
Legal woes poison Bayer’s prospects 20 Mar 2019 The German chemical group’s shares fell another 12 pct after a second U.S. jury said its Roundup weed killer causes cancer. Its value is down $34 bln since August and investors reckon its crop sciences unit is worthless. With thousands of cases pending, even that may be generous.
China’s hasty investment law garbles the message 15 Mar 2019 Lawmakers have passed new rules affecting foreign firms from BASF to BMW, fast-tracking reforms to ease U.S. trade tensions. The result, though, seems awkwardly vague, drawn up with little outside input. That suggests the aim is a diplomatic win: real change will take longer.
Raiffeisen is stalked by spectre of Danske 5 Mar 2019 Shares in the Austrian lender and two Dutch banks fell after media reports of money-laundering allegations. The former is the hardest hit since investors think the latter have stronger defences. Fears of a Danske-style U.S. probe mean they are in no mood to defer judgment.
Arrests give investors new reason to avoid Russia 26 Feb 2019 Sanctions imposed on some well-connected oligarchs have already spooked foreign money managers. The detention of Baring Vostok executives including founder Michael Calvey highlights domestic dangers. Less capital will be willing to navigate the risks.
Khashoggi is ghost at Milken’s Abu Dhabi confab 15 Feb 2019 Financiers at the billionaire’s annual Gulf shindig adopted a Trumpian shrug over Saudi agents’ murder of the dissident journalist. Lucrative forthcoming Aramco deals and White House support for the regime explain why. But the issues raised by Khashoggi’s death still linger.
Cannabis brings out mellow side of U.S. politics 13 Feb 2019 It’s one of the few issues on which most Americans agree, and a revived proposal to let banks serve state-sanctioned marijuana producers has a chance of becoming law. Fully legal weed remains a long way off – but that is something few in the industry actually want.
Holding: SEC stays classy on class-action lawsuits 13 Feb 2019 The U.S. watchdog allowed Johnson & Johnson to block a proposal to ban shareholders from suing en masse. The move preserves an essential check on corporate fraud – for now. Rising litigation and Supreme Court hostility to securities cases may soon force the regulator to yield.
Holding: Boards miss message about personal email 5 Feb 2019 Until recently, directors and officers could chat on individual accounts with near impunity. Now courts are forcing bosses at Uber, Facebook, Papa John's and elsewhere to cough up private and often incriminating texts. Think twice before sending that smiley-face emoticon.
M&A conflict case is advert for independent advice 31 Jan 2019 United Natural Foods is suing Goldman Sachs, saying the firm put its own interests first when it advised on and financed an acquisition. Goldman disagrees. Whatever the reality, having one adviser in multiple roles may be efficient, but it carries some risk of bad blood later.