LSE’s pricey LCH tilt anticipates boom in clearing 2 Sep 2011 So the London Stock Exchange is interested in LCH.Clearnet after all – and seems ready to pay a big price for the clearing house. Synergies appear limited. LSE CEO Xavier Rolet may be banking on an explosion of clearing in products that previously changed hands privately.
More winners than losers if AT&T deal fails 1 Sep 2011 The operator’s top brass and lawyers will obviously look awful if the $39 bln deal collapses. It’s not yet obvious how T-Mobile and Verizon would fare. But telecom equipment and handset firms, as well as the likes of Sprint, LightSquared and Crown Castle all stand to gain.
Irene should blow U.S. utility deal off course 1 Sep 2011 The $4.2 bln merger of Northeast Utilities and NSTAR is up for approval. But blackouts following the hurricane have exposed NU’s deficiencies serving customers despite charging America’s highest rates. Regulators should ensure service is on a better track before they OK any deal.
Japan’s LCD bailout puts state in reformist role 1 Sep 2011 Its big manufacturers have long placed job security over profits. So Tokyo has devised a face-saving way for Hitachi, Sony and Toshiba to spin off their ailing LCD units. A state-funded joint venture subsidizes R&D - and the social cost of consolidation that companies fear most.
Big pharmacy deal confronts past and now present 1 Sep 2011 Wall Street is betting there’s almost no chance trustbusters will approve the $29 bln acquisition of Medco by rival Express Scripts. Though overly pessimistic, two nixed healthcare mergers in the late 1990s and the challenge to AT&T’s deal provide good reason for skepticism.
Deutsche Telekom may be stuck with U.S. mobile 1 Sep 2011 It’s hard to see attractive alternative M&A options if the $39 bln sale of T-Mobile USA to AT&T falls through. DT may have to live with the business. But for CEO René Obermann it’s not a killer blow. He has the protection of a $6 bln breakup package and a good track record.
Obama’s watchdogs call AT&T’s $39 bln wager 31 Aug 2011 The No. 2 U.S. mobile company bet it could persuade regulators that buying No. 4 T-Mobile would benefit consumers. The U.S. DOJ senses a weak hand. With the industry a near duopoly, the government’s read looks right. AT&T isn’t folding but looks on the verge of a bad beat.
Exxon’s Russian coup rubs salt in BP’s wounds 31 Aug 2011 The U.S. oil group’s Arctic exploration agreement with Rosneft mimics BP’s aborted deal but without the $16 bln share swap. Instead, there’s Russian access to U.S. drilling projects. Assuming no hidden snags, Exxon could become the big winner from BP’s botched Russian strategy.
Spin-off trend isn’t just for investment bankers 31 Aug 2011 Companies from HP to Kraft to Conoco are splitting up. It’s tempting to think only Wall Street’s advisory ranks, who helped create these conglomerates in the first place, really benefit from such fads. But a few examples - Marathon Oil and Motorola - suggest investors can, too.
Vodafone’s Greek tie-up tests mobile M&A limits 31 Aug 2011 Vodafone is proposing a small Greek wedding. The resulting mobile-market duopoly might be hard for Europe’s competition police to swallow, even given Greece’s exceptional problems. But consolidation means big savings. A go-ahead for Vodafone here could spur larger European deals.
China’s new M&A rules may hurt its Internet stars 31 Aug 2011 A freshened regulatory framework adds clarity to the way China treats stock listings and takeovers. But mainland Internet firms which raise money overseas may have to change if they want to be listed at home, or even to secure their domestic operating licenses.
Greek bank M&A shows no mercy on weaker partners 31 Aug 2011 Eurobank EFG is giving less troubled Alpha the lion’s share of the value created by their planned union. The deal leaves Piraeus, the smallest of Greece’s top banks, needing a partner. NBG is the obvious candidate. But Piraeus may, like Eurobank, have to take asymmetric terms.
Qatari Greek bank bailout looks like strategic bet 31 Aug 2011 The 500 mln euro investment by little-known Qatari investment vehicle, Paramount, supporting the merger of Alpha and EFG is opportune. But the emirate might also expect to extract strategic dividends from its support of euro zone troubled banks.
Peabody’s $5 bln Aussie buy now looks a stretch 30 Aug 2011 Macarthur has finally succumbed to its U.S. rival and ArcelorMittal. More than a year on, Peabody has its target’s precious steel-making coal and Asian access in its grasp. But in the interim, the global growth outlook has dimmed. Demand will have to hold up to justify the price.
CCB sale underlines BofA’s slow road to recovery 30 Aug 2011 Offloading some $8 bln of the Chinese bank’s shares is a double boost to capital. Along with Buffett’s investment and future earnings, it should help put BofA back on track. But none offers a quick fix. Economic and mortgage woes will leave shareholders dangling for some time.
Temasek’s smart CCB trade may have strategic costs 30 Aug 2011 Singapore’s state investment fund is buying shares in China Construction Bank from Bank of America - at a valuation 21 pct below where it dumped the stock last month. That has financial logic. But it may look too clever for Beijing, and hurt Temasek’s access to deals in China.
Greek bank consolidation escapes Catch-22 29 Aug 2011 Cost-cutting mergers between Greek lenders are essential. Trouble is, they double exposure to sovereign debt. Alpha and EFG may have solved the problem by raising 500 mln euros from Qatar. Combining M&A with new private capital makes sense, but other deals may not come so easily.
Buffett’s $5 bln endorsement won’t end BofA’s woes 26 Aug 2011 Winning the Sage of Omaha’s backing is a coup for CEO Brian Moynihan - and the terms aren’t painful. But the deal offers no fix to BofA’s mortgage black hole nor does it immediately boost common capital. Those concerns may prove to be more enduring than Buffett’s thumbs up.
Bloomberg LP spares no expense on first big deal 25 Aug 2011 The New York mayor’s financial information company is paying $1 bln for legal publisher BNA. At 36 times earnings, no public company could reasonably compete. But the price also reflects Bloomberg’s ardor to expand its influence and build a cushion against Wall Street.
Abu Dhabi’s Aabar sticks out for the wrong reasons 25 Aug 2011 The state-owned investor has carried on spending as others have been told to cut back. But multi-billion dollar bets on Glencore and Malaysia’s RHB are under water. Aabar’s turn of fortune underscores the fund’s lack of a focused strategy.