Tag Archive | "firm"

Analyst Brad Hintz Has A Very Sick Fantasy About Goldman Sachs

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When the Sanford Bernstein analyst closes his eyes, he pictures Lloyd and Co going out of their way to get on Carl Levin’s good side, possibly going so far as to praise his work.

“As politicians continue to criticize the firm and the public scrutiny persists, we believe that Goldman’s clients will begin to rethink their relationship with the firm and the franchise will ultimately suffer,” he wrote. “With approximately 17 percent of the ownership in the hands of current and former partners, this control group has ample motivation to make amends with politicians and the public in order to reduce the threat to its franchise.”

[Bloomberg]



Article courtesy of Dealbreaker

Lawson Software Agrees to $2B Buyout

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Lawson Software (LWSN) agreed to be acquired by an affiliate of Golden Gate Capital and closely held rival Infor, the company announced today.

The deal values the firm at roughly $2 billion: Lawson shareholders will receive $11.25 a share in cash. The price is a 7.3% discount to yesterday’s closing price, but it is 14% premium to the March 7 close, before the parties made their first unsolicited takeover bid of about $1.8 billion, causing Lawson’s stock to spike.

The company began a strategic review in light of the offer, backed by billionaire investor Carl Icahn, the firm’s largest shareholder. Rumors were swirling yesterday that Lawson was close to a deal.

The shares were halted in premarket trading.

Article courtesy of Tech Trader Daily

Incensed Charlie Gasparino Tells Goldman, Lloyd, Lucas What He Really Thinks

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Catch Andrew Ross Sorkin’s column about Goldman Sachs this morning? Charlie Gasparino did and he didn’t like it. Noting Goldman Sachs’ desire not to make a big deal about the money it made correctly predicting the housing market crash, perhaps in an attempt not to attract anymore attention from Senator Carl “Goldman Sachs is a financial snake pit rife with greed, conflicts of interest, and wrongdoing” Levin, Sorkin encouraged the Masters of the Universe to stop denying their success. Rather, ARS would like to see them “take a bow,” as their housing call is something they should be proud of and which shareholders and taxpayers alike should be happy about, since it meant the latter didn’t have to bail the firm out to the extent it did Citi and AIG.  And that pissed Gasparino off something fierce.

Normally he wouldn’t say anything (“‘I’m not and never have been in the Goldman is the root-of-all-evil-camp,” CG prefaces) but after last month’s antics wherein the firm dared to deny his report Lloyd Blankfein’s friends claim he’s thinking of retiring, Chaz can no longer bite his tongue. Not to get too off-topic, but it still baffles CG as to how GS spokesman Lucas vP “can deny someone’s impression from a private conversation.” Sorry, he just had to get that out there. But back to the suggestion that Goldman should be taking any bows– bull shit, Gasparino says. Bull, shit.

“The last thing Goldman should be doing right now is taking a bow and telling the world it’s a great firm, because when it comes down to it, Goldman isn’t really a great firm.

“What is it then,” CG asks fuming. Not being here to simply raise questions without providing answers, Gasparino goes on, attributing a well-known saying to a guy he gets drunk with.

“Well, in the words of a drinking buddy who is a frequent consumer of financial news, ‘Goldman is like the tallest midget in the room.’”

How did Goldman become the tallest among short people?

Standing the tallest among these little men is Goldman, the firm most adept at exploiting the corrupt system that puts the government in bed with the big banks. Just today, Goldman announced that it earned $1.64 billion in the first quarter of 2011 even after repaying Warren Buffett the $5 billion he lent them in 2008 when the firm was teetering with the rest of Wall Street. Seems like a pretty amazing feat until you consider how Goldman earned all that cash. Low interest rates from the Fed over the past two-plus years means Goldman can basically borrow at next to nothing to place its market bets.

Those bets, it turns out, really aren’t bets at all. Firms like Goldman began buying depressed mortgage bonds in 2009 because they knew prices would rise. How did they know something like that? The Fed instituted a program to buy these bonds in the open market as a way to support the housing market. Like most things tried by the Obama administration to jump-start the economy, the plan didn’t work for Main Street. But not long after the buy-back program commenced, Wall Street — and Goldman in particular — began announcing record profits and bonuses to its bankers and traders. All of which transpired as Blankfein and his team tried to convince the world that Goldman really didn’t need all that bailout money in late 2008 and that they accepted the $10 billion in cash from then Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson because they were forced to do so by a government more worried about the health of entire financial system than the financial condition of Goldman Sachs. Sounds like a very modest gesture until you calculate how the taxpayer bailout of the giant insurer AIG was in actuality a back-door bailout of Goldman Sachs.

It didn’t have to come to this, Gasparino says, this being his exposing GS, and it wouldn’t have, if everyone had just listened to Uncle Charles way back when.

As all this came to light back in late 2009, I wrote a column here on HuffPost saying Blankfein should just resign and save the world the trouble of holding him accountable for explaining why Goldman is such a large midget.

Goldman Sachs: The Tallest Midget In The Room [HuffPo]



Article courtesy of Dealbreaker

Overseeing The Liquidation Of A Ponzi Scheme Almost As Lucrative As Running A Ponzi Scheme

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Irving Picard wants $43.2 million for the last four months of work on the Madoff file.

…bringing total fees sought in the case to $175.5 million since Madoff’s arrest.

Expenses of $1.1 million were claimed by trustee Irving Picard and Baker & Hostetler LLP from Oct. 1 to Jan. 31, according to a U.S. Bankruptcy Court filing in New York yesterday. The Madoff case took almost 955 hours of Picard’s time during the period, charged at $748 an hour, and 116,399 hours of his firm’s time at $371 an hour, according to the filing.

[Bloomberg]



Article courtesy of Dealbreaker

Fatal Risk: The Re-Education Of Goldman Sachs

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The following excerpt is from Fatal Risk: A Cautionary Tale Of AIG’s Corporate Suicide, a new book by investigative reporter Roddy Boyd.

The role of Goldman Sachs in AIG’s saga had its roots in a little- remarked-upon series of promotions involving a pair of managers known as the “J. Aron guys” taking control of Goldman’s Fixed- Income, Commodities, and Currency unit in the late 1990s. Gary Cohn and Lloyd Blankfein, veterans of Goldman’s sharp-elbowed commodities trading operation, saw a need to do things differently.

As they’d lay it out to the unit’s better producers in twos and threes, the firm was on the horns of a dilemma. In the looming post-Glass-Steagall landscape, “mega banks” like Citigroup and Bank of America (which had spent much of the past few years gobbling up Goldman’s competitors, big and small) would have the ability to throw around capital that Goldman would never have. Spreads were compressing, with margins immediately following, and whatever their vaunted relationships with clients had once been, they wouldn’t hold up in the face of Citi’s consistently being able to absorb a loss when it trades $5 billion of five- year Treasuries cheaper than anyone else.

Goldman didn’t need to change its business model; the marketplace had changed it for the firm. All that was required was to acknowledge it. So Cohn and Blankfein said Goldman should discard the way it had traditionally done its bond business, with an extensive focus on the largest 100 accounts according to assets managed and trading-revenue generation. From now on, Goldman’s bread-and-butter business plan was to compete to do every trade with everyone who rang up and then, after that, they would beat the bushes for more customers so they could do more trades. The bigger the better, of course, but every order was going to be fought for.

A certain group of longtime Goldman trading and sales staff were disgusted at the idea of becoming a glorified PaineWebber, in wasting time to give narrow bid and offer spreads on $1 million bond trades for a midwestern savings-and-loan or some $20-million-in-assets new hedge fund, many of whom might never call the firm again. Blankfein and Cohn would patiently meet with these people and reexplain themselves and lay out their reasons. A few weeks later, when various trading floor snitches reported back that the grumbling and politicking hadn’t stopped, these traders and sales staff found themselves having long midday lunches with Wall Street’s executive recruiters, exploring options at other firms, spinning tales of how they were happily leaving an ugly situation before it got much worse.

People like that, Blankfein and Cohn said, were just hard to reeducate. Another group of traders and salesmen who had joined the firm in the 1990s proved more willing to adapt. With only a passing connection to Goldman’s patrician past, they picked up much more quickly on what Blankfein and Cohn were trying to do. This wasn’t a bid to compete to get every trade per se, but a bid to get what every trade was telling you.

Who was buying what? What bonds were not moving and why? Where were people offsides? Who had conviction and who was sitting on the sidelines? And above all: why, why, why?

To get that information, you had to pay for it. The way you paid for it was in bidding or offering tons of bonds to customers you ordinarily could care less about. If the customer wouldn’t tell you directly, then you could piece it together based on what your desk and perhaps others were doing with them, or other customers like them. Then, armed with that information, they would be able to take the firm’s own capital and make some informed bets on a moment’s notice and make the real money.

In this formulation, Goldman was not to be the biggest trader, have the smartest people, or dominate any one market. But when it came time to take advantage of market moves, they would be there first and with their own money. Other firms might have bigger years and more dominant franchises, but no one would have a better return on equity. Since this was happening in the late 1990s, when Goldman was still a partnership, this was their own money at stake and return on equity was a key measurement. Blankfein and Cohn (and dozens more newly minted partners from the 1990s) were not terribly inclined to maintain a partnership in an era where even their longtime rivals at Salomon Brothers had sold out to Citibank to secure a more solid balance sheet. No, Blankfein and Cohn would push for a public offering and bring in some additional capital.8 Because, from where they sat, just about the entire bond world was evolving away from everything Goldman Sachs was, namely relationship- and client-driven and capital-at-risk averse.

Every day, in meetings in offices and on the trading floor, they drilled it home: margins were gone and they were not going to come back. Everything they did would have to become integrated: the growing prime-brokerage unit would open trading accounts for the growing number of hedge funds out there. Because they provided their own capital to these hedge funds, they had an instant customer base. Sales staff would have more clients to call, analysts would have more people to peddle ideas to, and traders could execute trades. What they lost in higher-margin business they would make up by “touching” the customer a dozen different ways. Things they had long hesitated to do—peddle derivatives en masse—they would do as markets became more integrated and ways to mitigate risk became more accessible. Above all, everyone was to hustle for that idea that had the big payday attached.

The way Blankfein and Cohn saw it, Goldman’s reputation as a repository of old-time investment-banking mores was a helpful asset that existed intellectually, in some vague, public relations type of way. In the world they had to live in, their customers were years removed from the white-shoe image of its past; all they honestly cared about was price and liquidity. To do that, with a competitive landscape that was getting more steep every quarter, was going to require a safecracker’s touch if they wanted to remain independent.



Article courtesy of Dealbreaker

Global PC Market Shrinks in Q1, Says IDC

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Global PC shipments declined 3.2% during the first quarter of 2011, compared to the same time last year, according to the International Data Corporation (IDC) Worldwide Quarterly PC Tracker.

The decline represented the first contraction in the worldwide PC market since the end of the recent recession, the firm said.

IDC chalked up the drop to a still cautious business mentality, waning consumer enthusiasm persisted, a spike in fuel and commodity prices and the disruptions in Japan.

Emerging markets fared better due to lower saturation rates, but also slowed somewhat with Asia-Pacific (excluding Japan) slowing to a 5.6% growth and China continuing to cool off after a momentous 2010, the firm said.

“‘Good-enough computing’ has become a firm reality, exemplified first by Mini Notebooks and now Media Tablets,” said Jay Chou, senior research analyst at IDC. ”Macroeconomic forces can explain some of the ebb and flow of the PC business, but the real question PC vendors have to think hard about is how to enable a compelling user experience that can justify spending on the added horsepower.”

  • HP (HPQ) declined 2.8% compared to the first quarter of 2010, outperforming most markets by taking advantage of surging demand in Latin America. But it struggled in Asia-Pacific (excluding Japan).
  • Dell (DELL) had lackluster demand in the U.S. and other key markets, but it made significant strides in emerging markets. Dell slightly outperformed the market with volume declining at 1.8%.
  • Acer was affected by continued turbulence in EMEA, its biggest market. It is feeling the pullback in the mini notebook and consumer space. In the U.S., Acer also ceded its place to Apple (AAPL).
  • Lenovo significantly outperformed the market, posting 16.3% growth. It continued to dominate Asia-Pacific. Both its desktop and portable PCs grew in double digits compared to the same quarter in 2010.
  • Toshiba finished the first quarter with 3.8% growth, helped by a lack of exposure to mini notebooks. Solid gains were reported in all markets except EMEA.

Article courtesy of Tech Trader Daily

European tech investors: Where is the love?

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Europe investment venture capitalLast week we reported that the Forbes 2011 Midas List of the top 100 tech investors included only two women.

What may have escaped notice is that only two investors based in Europe made it onto the list: Antoine Papiernik of Sofinnova Partners (No. 36) and Danny Rimer of Index Ventures (No. 59).

The Midas List ranks top venture capitalists according to their leadership within a firm or sector, the firm’s overall standing in the venture capital industry and an analysis of the firm’s disclosed M&A’s and IPO exits. Based on Forbes’ analysis, Europe appears to be the stepchild of the venture capital world.

I tracked down Papiernik and Rimer and asked them about investing in Europe. According to Business Insider, Europe has the smallest stockpile of venture capital funds in the world. While the US has $77 billion in “dry powder” (funds available for investment) as of April 2011, VC funds focused on Europe have $28 billion, while Asia and the rest of the world is sitting on $51 billion.

Danny Rimer started Index Ventures’ London office and has been involved in European success stories like MySql, Last.Fm and Skype. He pointed out that the Forbes list is very US-centric in that it doesn’t include many Asian investors either. He says “It’s like the world series of baseball”, i.e. global in title, but not in reality.

Papiernik, who specializes in Life Sciences and whose fund has been involved in 3 billion dollars in company exits in the past two years, agrees that venture capital is still seen as a US business. “LPs (limited partners, who provide the money to VC funds) traditionally tend to look in their back mirrors”, he says, and European venture capital is not what they see there. Rimer told me that “Europe is not considered to be a hotbed of innovation and good liquidity results” and that his fund has made a good business out of that perception.

Rimer highlights a trend in European tech companies like music subscription service Spotify or multiplayer game portal Gameforge, which have the potential to go global and are even being cloned in the U.S. He would like to see more European IPOs and European companies buying local startups. Papiernik notes that big pharma is closing down a lot of research labs in Europe so many more qualified people are available to start companies.

Given that the European VC market probably has considerable room to grow, it’s surprising that more U.S. venture firms are not looking to expand in that direction. “In life sciences there is more of a level playing field worldwide. Big pharma doesn’t care where a company is,” concludes Papiernik. Sounds like good business to me.

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Article courtesy of VentureBeat » deals

Jamie Dimon: 1, Tim Geithner: 0

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When one is the chief executive of a bank or otherwise important person whose skills are in high demand, he or she needs to be available to pick up and move out of state at a moment’s notice, whether or not the the house is sold or the water is still running. This hasn’t posed a problem in time’s past, what with the most magnificent housing bubble the world had ever seen, but with the market having its teeth kicked in and left naked and bound in an alleyway with the words “Big Al” was here written in Sharpie across its chest, thing have been slightly more difficult of late. Tim Geithner, for instance, hasn’t been able to sell his Westchester house since taking the job of Treausury Secretary, despite cutting the price and retiling the bathroom, ultimately being forced to rent it out by the hour. Jamie Dimon too went through a similar problem unloading his Chicago home (where he lived as CEO of Bank One and held on to til his daughters graduated high school), despite fantastic art gracing the walls. Luckily for JD, the long wait is over. He reportedly sold his manse for $6.8 million (after having bought it for $4.7 million) and JPMorgan apparently picked up the relator tab.

JPMorgan covered $421,458 in real estate commissions and related costs in selling Dimon’s Gold Coast mansion. In the company’s proxy, it said the payment of commissions, appraisals, inspections, title search and other ordinary costs of selling a home was “in accordance with the firm’s general policy on relocation expenses, applicable to all eligible employees who relocate at the request of the firm.”

Meanwhile, Geithner has to take calls during meetings with the Chinese that the toilet is clogged again and he needs to fix it; don’t even get him started on the fact that even though the lease agreement prohibits smoking, he sees that damn hookah out every time he stops by.

[CRD via BI]



Article courtesy of Dealbreaker

Opening Bell: 04.01.11

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Nasdaq, ICE, Make NYSE Bid (WSJ)
Nasdaq OMX and ICE said Friday that they are proposing to buy NYSE Euronext for $42.50 in cash and stock per NYSE Euronext share, or about $11.3 billion, based on the respective Nasdaq OMX and ICE closing share prices on Thursday.

Berkshire’s Abel Advances in Buffett’s ‘Top 4’ After Sokol Exit (Bloomberg)
Buffett introduced Abel to Berkshire shareholders in the billionaire’s 2002 annual letter, calling the manager Sokol’s “key associate.” In subsequent letters, Abel’s name always followed Sokol’s as Buffett praised “Dave and Greg” for their work expanding the energy business. Sokol said in an interview last year that Abel began working with him at MidAmerican in the early 1990’s when the company was independent. Sokol, previously MidAmerican’s CEO, sold the company to Buffett for about $9 billion. Sokol said it was his idea to promote Abel three years ago. “I went to Warren and said, ‘Greg is doing a fantastic job,’” Sokol said on Aug. 16 at Bloomberg headquarters in New York. “Warren said ‘If that’s what you think is the right thing to do, then that’s fine.’ So I turned the CEO title over to Greg.”

U.S. Payrolls Grew 216,000 in March; Unemployment at 8.8% (Bloomberg)
Payrolls increased by 216,000 workers last month after a revised 194,000 gain the prior month, the Labor Department said today in Washington. Economists projected a March gain of 190,000, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey. The jobless rate dropped from 8.9 percent in February, the fourth straight decrease.

Warren Buffett’s Halo Tarnished, By Charlie Gasparino (TDB)
“I can tell you that this entire episode shows why investors and the media should stop portraying Warren Buffett as a saint, who never lies, cheats or equivocates and surrounds himself with similar heavenly characters. Instead, Buffett should be seem for what he is: A great investor and businessman motivated by greed and ambition and like his unheavenly deputy.”

Morgan Stanley Venture Struggles (WSJ)
A joint venture between Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley will likely report an extraordinary loss of about ¥80 billion ($956 million) for the just-ended fiscal year, due to unrealized losses from bond trading, people familiar with the matter said Friday. Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities Co. was set up by MUFG and the U.S. investment bank in May last year by merging Morgan Stanley’s Japanese investment banking operations, including its merger and acquisition business, with Mitsubishi UFJ Securities.

Subprime Bonds Are Back (WSJ)
The prices on a representative slice of the subprime bond market have doubled from 30 cents on the dollar at the low point of the crisis to roughly 60 cents today.

TPG to Sell Stake to Kuwait, Singapore (WSJ)
TPG Holdings has reached a deal to sell nearly 5% of itself to sovereign-wealth funds operated by Kuwait and Singapore. The deal values the firm at about $11 billion and allows it to raise several hundred million dollars, according to people close to the matter.

Marc Faber: Still a Bear, and He Has His Reasons (CNBC)
“I know I will die, but I’m still living,” Faber says. “What do you want me to do about it? Should I kill myself in anticipation of certain death in 10 or 15 years time?” The same kind of logic applied to his run on Wall Street, which began in 1970 at the firm White Weld & Co. with a role summarizing economic research to send to overseas offices, in the pre-Internet days. He got to know future U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, who gave a briefing to the firm every two weeks. “At the end I was the only person attending because all he did was summarize the Wall Street Journal of the previous day,” Faber says.

Roubini: Banks Risk Breaking Back Of Irish Government (CNBC)
“They cannot keep on socializing losses and eventually having sovereign risk becoming banking risk and banking risk becoming sovereign risk, that’s not the right approach.”

RBS Expects To Triple India Banking Assets (Bloomberg)
The U.K.’s biggest government-controlled bank, which manages $1 billion of assets for private banking clients in India, plans to increase its wealth management employees by 54 percent to 100 in two years, Gupta said. The bank will also add 20 more relationship managers in the country, taking the total to 45 in that period, he said.



Article courtesy of Dealbreaker

Great News For Morgan Stanley Shareholders

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James Gorman’s poker performance indicates he’s unlikely to run the firm into the ground.

Gorman, a man who has pared risk and made Morgan Stanley a more balanced institution, seems unlikely to make the sort of big bet that either propels the firm into a new golden age — or torpedoes it. He’s a more cautious and consistent player than that. Here’s how his friend Ken Buckfire, CEO of investment bank Miller Buckfire, describes Gorman’s performance in a summer poker game that’s been going on the better part of two decades: “He’s usually up a few bucks but never the big winner.” For Morgan Stanley in 2011, that may be just the kind of approach that’s called for.

It’s unclear if the Dollar Dominatrix knew about this when she took a shiv to MS’s earnings last week.

Can James Gorman Make Morgan Stanley Great Again? [Fortune]



Article courtesy of Dealbreaker