Market Chatter — Corporate finance press digest

July 20 (Reuters) – The following corporate finance-related stories were reported by media on Tuesday:

* Hoare Govett, the Royal Bank of Scotland’s (RBS.L) corporate brokering business, has won its first FTSE100 client since it was bought by RBS from ABN Amro three years ago, the Financial Times said on Tuesday. [ID:nLDE66J00H]

* AIA, the Asian life insurance unit of American International Group (AIG.N), is seeking backing from potential investors to cut ties with its U.S. parent by listing more than half its equity in the Hong Kong market, the Financial Times said. [ID:nLDE66J00D]

* Kumba Iron Ore (KIOJ.J) may look for other domestic buyers to take extra ore if ArcelorMittal’s South African unit (ISPA.AS) shuts down one of its plants, Business Report newspaper said. [ID:nLDE66I0NM]

* India’s Tata Steel (TISC.BO) has started talks with lenders including Citigroup (C.N) to refinance as much as 3.5 billion pounds ($5.4 billion ) in loans for its British unit, Bloomberg reported, citing six sources with knowledge of the matter. [ID:nSGE66I0LK] (Compiled by Tresa Sherin Morera)

FACTBOX-Five facts about new AIA head Tucker

(Reuters) – Former Prudential Plc (PRU.L) chief executive Mark Tucker was on Monday named by bailed-out insurer American International Group Inc (AIG) (AIG.N) as executive chairman and CEO of its Asian life insurance business, American International Assurance (AIA), replacing existing head Mark Wilson. [ID:nTOE66I026]

Following are five facts about Tucker:

* Started adult life as a trainee professional footballer in Britain, making appearances for Wolverhampton Wanderers, Rochdale and Barnet.

* Is a chartered accountant. First joined Prudential group in 1986, working initially in Prudential Portfolio Managers Limited. Was Chief Executive of Prudential Corporation Asia for a decade up until 2003.

* Left Prudential in 2004 to join HBOS Plc as finance director. But returned as Prudential’s CEO in 2005 and stayed in that role until 2009, when he quit the group.

* Had eyed acquisition of AIA when he was CEO, but AIG did not proceed with the sale then.

* Born on Dec. 29, 1957 (Compiled by Muralikumar Anantharaman)

UPDATE 1-AIG names ex-Pru CEO Tucker AIA boss, revives AIA IPO

HONG KONG, July 19 (Reuters) – Bailed-out insurer American International Group Inc (AIG) (AIG.N) named former Prudential plc (PRU.L) Chief Executive Mark Tucker as head of its Asia life insurance business, AIA, replacing existing boss Mark Wilson.

AIG said in a statement on Monday that it would also seek to list American International Assurance Co Ltd (AIA) on the Hong Kong stock exchange, subject to regulatory approvals and market conditions.

AIG gave no explanation for ousting Wilson, who was well regarded within AIA.

“After reviewing various options to monetize AIA’s substantial value, we have concluded that an IPO is our best option,” Robert H. Benmosche, AIG Chief Executive Officer said in a statement.

“Mark Tucker has the public company experience, track record, relationships…that will help us accomplish our ambitious goals of not just taking a company of AIA’s size and scope public, but building on this great platform for the long term to create Asia’s pre-eminent, publicly traded insurance company,” he added.

Wilson’s ouster also comes less than a week after AIG’s Chairman Harvey Golub resigned over a disagreement with Benmosche.

The move is the latest sign that Benmosche is asserting his authority at AIG, which is nearly 80 percent-owned by the U.S. government. The board room battle at AIG intensified after British insurer Prudential’s plc (PRU.L) $35.5 billion bid for AIA collapsed last month.

Wilson, who was instrumental in holding AIA together when AIG was on the brink of collapse, had reportedly threatened to resign if Prudential’s acquisition had gone ahead. That put him in odds with the AIG management.

AIA is already functioning without a chief financial officer and a chief legal counsel, and the company has installed a new CEO just months before a massive IPO.

Bankers have previously told Reuters that AIA could raise $15 billion through an IPO, which is expected before the end of 2010. (Reporting by Denny Thomas; Editing by Jonathan Hopfner)

Market Chatter — Corporate finance press digest

July 15 (Reuters) – The following corporate finance-related stories were reported by media on Thursday:

* Top Chinese automaker SAIC Motor Corp (600104.SS) might continue to slash its holdings in troubled South Korean carmaker Ssangyong Motor (003620.KS), the China Business News said on Thursday. [ID:nTOE66E01D]

* India’s Reliance Communications (RLCM.BO) may have to lower the value of its tower assets being sold to GTL Infrastructure (GTLI.BO) in view of a likely stake sale in the No. 2 Indian mobile operator to Abu Dhabi’s Etisalat (ETEL.AD), the Economic Times reported. [ID:nSGE66E03H]

* Financial services firm Religare Enterprises Ltd (RELG.BO) has agreed to buy a part of Citigroup’s (C.N) home loan portfolio in India for nearly 5 billion rupees ($107 million), the Economic Times said. [ID:nSGE66E04X]

* U.S. investor York Capital is seeking a stake in Germany’s Conergy (CGYG.DE) by taking over loans to the solar company which at a later stage will be converted into Conergy shares, German paper Handelsblatt said on Wednesday. [ID:nLDE66D1X1]

* American International Group Inc (AIG.N) has floated a plan to partially pay down its U.S. bailout debt by selling stakes in two entities that were created to take toxic assets off its books, Bloomberg said on Wednesday. [ID:nN14131409] (Compiled by Anirban Sen in Bangalore)

Market Chatter — Corporate finance press digest

July 13 (Reuters) – The following corporate finance-related stories were reported by media on Tuesday:

* Four Chinese groups have approached American International Group (AIG.N) about buying AIA, its main Asian unit that it is selling to repay the U.S. government for a bailout during the financial crisis, Hong Kong media reported on Tuesday. [ID:nTOE66C00I]

* Avis Budget Group Inc will top rival Hertz Global Holdings Inc’s (HTZ.N) $1.2 billion bid for Dollar Thrifty Automotive Group Inc (DTG.N), according to the Wall Street Journal. [ID:nN12210161]

* Japanese regulators may move forward with its antitrust review of BHP Billiton (BHP.AX) (BLT.L) and Rio Tinto Group’s (RIO.AX) (RIO.L) plan to integrate their Australian iron ore operations, the Nikkei business daily reported. [ID:nSGE66B0IH]

* Billionaire investor Nelson Peltz is seeking to raise $1.5 billion for a fund meant to buy minority stakes in public companies, Bloomberg said on Monday, citing two people with direct knowledge of his plans. [ID:nN12213161] (Compiled by Anirban Sen in Bangalore)

Market Chatter — Corporate finance press digest

July 13 (Reuters) – The following corporate finance-related stories were reported by media on Tuesday:

* Four Chinese groups have approached American International Group (AIG.N) about buying AIA, its main Asian unit that it is selling to repay the U.S. government for a bailout during the financial crisis, Hong Kong media reported on Tuesday. [ID:nTOE66C00I]

* Avis Budget Group Inc will top rival Hertz Global Holdings Inc’s (HTZ.N) $1.2 billion bid for Dollar Thrifty Automotive Group Inc (DTG.N), according to the Wall Street Journal. [ID:nN12210161]

* Japanese regulators may move forward with its antitrust review of BHP Billiton (BHP.AX) (BLT.L) and Rio Tinto Group’s (RIO.AX) (RIO.L) plan to integrate their Australian iron ore operations, the Nikkei business daily reported. [ID:nSGE66B0IH]

* Billionaire investor Nelson Peltz is seeking to raise $1.5 billion for a fund meant to buy minority stakes in public companies, Bloomberg said on Monday, citing two people with direct knowledge of his plans. [ID:nN12213161] (Compiled by Anirban Sen in Bangalore)

PRESS DIGEST – New York Times business news – July 1

Reuters) – The following were the top stories in the New York Times business pages on Thursday. Reuters has not verified these stories and does not vouch for their accuracy.

* Executives of Goldman Sachs Group Inc (GS.N) and the American International Group Inc (AIG.N) , the Wall Street titans whose long alliance dissolved into a battle that shook the financial world, defended their actions on Wednesday before the federal commission investigating the financial crisis.

* The House on Wednesday adopted legislation to revamp the nation’s financial regulatory system, voting mostly along party lines as partisan acrimony impeded cooperation even on the shared goals of averting future economic crises.

* Google Inc (GOOG.O) will raise the salaries of gay and lesbian employees whose partners receive domestic partner benefits, to compensate them for a tax they pay that heterosexual married couples do not.

* Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O), which sells millions of products, said Wednesday that it had agreed to buy Woot, a site that sells one item at a time.

* Britain’s financial regulator disclosed on Tuesday that Steven Noel Perkins, a former oil futures broker, single-handedly engineered a jump in the price of oil a year ago and cost his firm millions of dollars with a string of unauthorized trades after a weekend of heavy drinking.

* Toyota Motor Corp (7203.T) said Thursday about 270,000 vehicles sold worldwide, including luxury Lexus sedans, have faulty engines, but the company did not say whether it would recall the automobiles.

* Financial institutions in Europe sought far less money from the European Central Bank on Wednesday than many analysts had expected, offering some reassurance about the health of the euro region’s banking system.

* The Securities and Exchange Commission on Wednesday tightened restrictions against “pay-to-play” practices in the municipal securities market.

* The United States won an “important victory” in a trade ruling that Airbus, the European plane maker, had benefited from four decades of improper subsidies, taking sales from Boeing Co (BA.N) as a result, the United States trade representative, Ron Kirk, said on Wednesday.

PRESS DIGEST – Wall Street Journal – July 1

(Reuters) – The following were the top stories in The Wall Street Journal on Thursday. Reuters has not verified these stories and does not vouch for their accuracy.

* Spain’s sky-high unemployment and a backlash against foreign workers that was sparked by the downturn have put the brakes on what experts consider one of developed world’s biggest immigration booms in modern times.

* Demand for the European Central Bank’s offer of three-month funds fell short of expectations Wednesday, relieving fears that the region’s banks are dependent on an ECB lifeline to stay afloat.

* Two shareholder activists called on UBS AG (UBSN.VX) to pursue the Swiss bank’s former bosses for their role in more than $50 billion of write-downs on illiquid securities.

* The Portuguese government on Wednesday vetoed Telefonica SA’s (TEF.MC) 7.15 billion euro ($8.72 billion) bid to acquire Portugal Telecom SA’s (PTC.LS) stake in the companies’ Brazilian joint venture, in a surprise move that sets the stage for a confrontation with European Union authorities.

* The World Trade Organization formally condemned European subsidies to civil-aircraft maker Airbus, concluding the first half of the most expensive trade dispute in WTO history.

* Banco Santander’s (SAN.MC) spending moves have confounded some analysts who are concerned about the bank’s rising funding costs and its home-market woes.

* Joseph Cassano, who led the division of American International Group Inc (AIG.N) responsible for the mortgage trades that proved the insurer’s downfall, on Wednesday staunchly defended his actions, maintaining he made “prudent” decisions and that American taxpayers would have been better off had he stayed on.

* The European Union’s executive arm weighed in with proposals on Wednesday to discipline free-spending governments by cutting off EU farm and fisheries payments that often run into billions of euros a year.

* The House agreed Wednesday to a sweeping rewrite of the nation’s financial regulations, moving the initiative one step closer to becoming law.

* European Union government representatives backed a preliminary agreement with the European Parliament on rules to limit bankers’ bonuses in response to criticism of compensation for executives.

* Prudential Plc (PRU.L) Chairman Harvey McGrath and Chief Executive Officer Tidjane Thiam still have board support despite the U.K. insurer’s failed $35.5 billion bid for the Asian life-insurance business of American International Group Inc (AIG.N), its chief financial officer said.

* Two days after the death of Swatch Group AG (UHR.VX) founder and Chairman Nicolas G. Hayek the Swiss watch and luxury-goods maker said Wednesday his daughter Nayla Hayek has been elected as his successor and will head the company’s board.

* Alcon Inc (ACL.N) said Wednesday it will hold a shareholder meeting in August to vote on five board nominees proposed by Swiss pharmaceutical giant Novartis AG (NOVN.VX), which tried earlier this year to essentially take over the eye-care and medical-device company.

AIG CEO threatened to quit if chairman stays: report

(Reuters) – American International Group Inc Chief Executive Robert Benmosche said last week he would quit unless Chairman Harvey Golub leaves the company, Bloomberg reported on Wednesday.

Benmosche told the board during a meeting on June 25 that he wanted more control over the divestment of AIG’s Asian life insurance unit, including making management changes, Bloomberg reported, citing unnamed sources.

The board of the insurer, which is nearly 80 percent owned by the U.S. government after a $182.3 billion rescue, did not make a decision during the meeting, the report said.

AIG declined to comment.

The development is the latest sign of tensions within the AIG boardroom after a deal to sell American International Assurance (AIA) to Britain’s Prudential Plc for $35.5 billion fell apart.

Prudential wanted to cut the price of the deal and Benmosche backed doing so, but the AIG board voted against doing that, overruling its hard-charging CEO, sources have said.

AIG was counting on the AIA sale as a big step forward in its efforts to repay taxpayers.

Benmosche favored accepting new terms for a deal because, even at a lower price, it offered more liquidity and sooner. In the process, though, Benmosche left some AIG directors unhappy with his handling of the transaction, a source told Reuters earlier this month.

But Benmosche, the fourth person to hold the top AIG job since June 2008, was seen as safe in his role, with the board wanting him to stay CEO, the source said at the time.

An important concern for the board was the difficulty of finding another person to take on the job of running AIG, according to the source at the time.

Last week, the Financial Times reported that the botched sale had led to increased tensions between Benmosche and Golub, triggering concerns that one of the two men might leave less than a year after their appointment.

(Reporting by Paritosh Bansal; Editing by Gary Hill)

Factbox: What U.S. financial overhaul means for the Fed

The reforms are part of a broader regulatory overhaul meant to prevent a repeat of the 2007-09 financial crisis that tipped the economy into a deep recession and triggered massive taxpayer bailouts of big banks.

Lawmakers from the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate have melded versions of regulatory reform and are expected to send a bill to President Barack Obama to sign into law before the July 4 holiday.

Following is a look at provisions that affect the Federal Reserve:

CONSUMER PROTECTION

An independent Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection would be set up within the Fed. It would be funded by the Fed, although it could turn to Congress if it saw the need for funding. The agency would have power to write and enforce consumer protection rules. The Fed would not be able to intervene in actions of the bureau or review or delay its rules.

SYSTEMIC RISK REGULATION

The Fed would be part of an inter-agency Financial Stability Oversight Council chaired by the secretary of the Treasury to watch for dangers that could roil the wider financial system, giving the Fed some powers to take action. The Fed could be put in charge of supervising large non-bank financial firms the council deems systemically risky. It would be able to break up those firms to guard against risks.

EMERGENCY LENDING

The Fed could no longer use its emergency lending authority to help a specific company, as it did during the crisis with Bear Stearns and American International Group. Instead, it would have to create a lending facility open to firms of a certain type, as it did with Wall Street investment banks and commercial paper markets.

AUDITS AND DISCLOSURE

The Fed’s emergency lending during the 2007-09 crisis would be subject to a congressional audit, as would any future special emergency lending. The Fed would be required to make public information about borrowing at emergency facilities a year after each facility closes.

Borrowing at the Fed’s discount window and transactions at its open market desk would be made public after a two-year lag. Both of those facilities, whose operations are part of the Fed’s ongoing activities, would be subject to congressional audit.

GOVERNANCE

The president would name a Fed vice chairman for supervision. Bankers supervised by the Fed who serve on the boards of directors of the 12 regional Fed banks would lose the ability to vote for the presidents of those regional Fed banks. Lawmakers agreed to an audit of Fed system governance by the Government Accountability Office.

(For stories on Fed policy, please double-click on)

UPDATE 2-Market Chatter — Corporate finance press digest

June 25 (Reuters) – The following corporate finance-related stories were reported by media on Friday:

* Dutch bancassurer ING Group (ING.AS) is considering retaining its Belgian insurance activities rather than divesting the business as part of its European Union-mandated restructuring, Belgium’s De Tijd said. [ID:nLDE65O05J]

* American International Group’s (AIG.N) failed sale of its Asian life insurance unit AIA has led to increased tensions between Chief Executive Robert Benmosche and Chairman Harvey Golub, the Financial Times said, citing people close to the situation. [ID:nSGE65O03G]

* Lions Gate (LGF.N) Entertainment Corp has restarted talks with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer [MGMYR.UL] about a possible merger, the Financial Times reported. [ID:nLDE65O00I]

* Dubai International Capital denied speculation it plans to offload its European assets, saying it will hold on to its investments for at least two more years, the Financial Times reported. [ID:nLDE65O003]

* China Strategic Holdings (0235.HK) and Primus Financial Holdings have lost their Taiwanese partner Chinatrust Financial Holding (2891.TW) in their $2.2 billion bid for AIG’s (AIG.N) Taiwan Nan Shan Life unit, a newspaper said. [ID:nTOE65O01G]

* A-shares of China’s Agricultural Bank of China [ABC.UL] were 16 times oversubscribed upon the completion of domestic pre-marketing for its IPO, with a price-to-book value of nearly 1.6 times, the Securities Times said. [ID:nTOE65N089]

For the deals of the day, please double click on [ID:nSGE65O06B]

(Compiled by Anirban Sen in Bangalore; Editing by Valerie Lee and David Holmes)

Europe drags global takeovers to six-year slump

(Reuters) – Global merger and acquisition activity in 2010 is off to its worst start in six years, and with economic uncertainty and a sovereign debt crisis in Europe, the second half could be just as disappointing.

Deals

As of June 22, global M&A this year was worth just under $976 billion, according to Thomson Reuters data, less than half the value of the first half of 2007, M&A’s peak year, and only moderately higher than the first half of 2004, when M&A was recovering from the dot-com implosion.

While the economic crisis has depressed activity around the world, Europe’s performance was bleakest, with added fears about sovereign debt and a longer recession dragging the region to its worst start in a decade and overshadowing tentative signs of recovery in the United States and Asia-Pacific.

“Weighing on the markets have been issues like the European sovereign debt crisis. The BP catastrophe has (also) impacted world markets and will continue to represent an overhang,” said Jeffrey Kaplan, global head of M&A at Bank of America Merrill Lynch..

Volatility and uncertainty have meant that Europe hasn’t been particularly conducive to M&A, said Guiseppe Monarchi, head of M&A for Europe, the Middle East and Africa at Credit Suisse.

“It’s difficult from where we stand today to predict anything more than that we keep going sideways in M&A for the rest of the year,” he said.

First-half European M&A slumped 23 percent year-on-year to $227 billion.

The failure of British insurer Prudential’s $35 billion bid for American International Group Inc’s Asian insurance unit particularly depressed the region’s total.

The deal, an audacious transaction reminiscent of a bull market, was scuttled when shareholders balked at the price Prudential’s relatively new management was preparing to pay.

The picture was not quite so dismal in the United States, where first-half M&A fell just 5 percent to $339 billion and accounted for six of the year’s top 10 deals.

“Comparative statistics for the first half are distorted because of the significant government-related M&A last year. If you pro forma the data, the statistics are more compelling,” said Lee LeBrun, co-head of Americas M&A at UBS.

“However, most of the transactions which have been put on hold have not been shelved entirely and could very well return,” he said.

M&A in Asia-Pacific was down 1.1 percent to just under $186 billion, with the United States and Britain dominating large cross-border business as the most acquisitive nations.

EMERGING BRIGHT SPOTS

Companies that have spent the last two years conserving cash will be in the best position to lead a recovery in M&A, although how soon that will happen remains unclear.

“There are two trends ahead. Our clients are thinking, can we go outside our core markets to find higher growth, or can we find bargains — undervalued assets in mature markets,” said Hernan Cristerna, head of M&A for Europe, the Middle East and Africa at JPMorgan Chase & Co, which tops the advisory ranking for Europe this year.

Spain’s Telefonica, hit by stagnating sales at home, is offering a hefty premium to buy out its partner Portugal Telecom and take full control of Vivo, their lucrative joint venture in Brazil.

French giant Vivendi approached Kuwait’s Zain to buy Zain’s African telecom business but was eventually outbid by India’s Bharti. Consolidation in the emerging markets has added another layer of competition for western companies seeking strategic assets.

U.S. food conglomerate Kraft raised expectations about opportunistic bids with its purchase of Cadbury, especially acquisitions of European companies by U.S. peers, helped by the strength of the dollar against the euro and sterling.

News Corp’s $12 billion proposal to take full control of British satellite broadcaster BSKyB is a sign that more opportunistic pursuits may be in the pipeline.

“The market is certainly better than last year, with more $1 billion-plus deals, and we expect M&A will continue to accelerate,” said JPMorgan’s Cristerna.

(Reporting by Victoria Howley; additional reporting by Quentin Webb, Paritosh Bansal and Jessica Hall; Editing by John Wallace and Steve Orlofsky)

AIG CEO, Chairman at odds over failed AIA deal – FT

(Reuters) – American International Group’s (AIG.N) failed sale of its Asian life insurance unit AIA has led to increased tensions between Chief Executive Robert Benmosche and Chairman Harvey Golub, the Financial Times said, citing people close to the situation.

Stocks | Mergers & Acquisitions | IPOs | Global Markets | Financials

AIG is weighing its options for its Asian life insurance unit after a $35.5 billion deal to sell the business to Prudential fell apart.

Benmosche had supported Prudential PLC (PRU.L) deal and argued for accepting a reduction of about $5 billion to help the British company win support from its shareholders, the people told the paper.

However, AIG’s board led by Golub rejected the idea by an overwhelming margin, forcing AIG to go back to its original plan for a public listing of AIA, the FT said.

The divestment of AIA, which could include an IPO, is seen as a key step in AIG’s efforts to repay the government for its $182.3 billion bailout. [ID:nN14222874]

The rift between AIG’s two top executives has triggered concerns within the board and among officials in the U.S. government, who fear one of the two men might leave less than a year after their appointment, the paper said.

However, the relationship between Benmosche and Golub has not yet completely broken down, the people told the paper.

AIG could not immediately be reached by Reuters for comment outside regular U.S. business hours. (Reporting by Sakthi Prasad in Bangalore; Editing by Lincoln Feast)

Goldman Sachs reclaims top spot in global M&A

(Reuters) – Goldman Sachs reclaimed the top spot for mergers and acquisitions advice in the first half of 2010, underlining the Wall Street giant’s resilience even as it battles U.S. civil fraud charges.

Deals

With global dealmaking still subdued, Goldman’s (GS.N) advisory role on nearly $190 billion of transactions allowed it to retake the M&A crown from Morgan Stanley (MS.N), which last year bested its arch-rival for the first time since 1996.

Preliminary data from Thomson Reuters, released on Friday, showed global announced M&A hit $976 billion in the year to June 22, in line with last year’s subdued levels.

Goldman worked on five of the year’s 10 largest deals, more than any rival except Morgan Stanley, advising American International Group Inc’s (AIG.N) American Life Insurance Co Inc (ALICO), Coca-Cola Co (KO.N), Schlumberger Ltd (SLB.N), Novartis AG (NOVN.VX), and Allegheny Energy Inc (AYE.N).

M&A rankings are typically based on relationships built up over years, and deals that can take many months to craft.

Still, the recovery is welcome news for Goldman as it battles the worst blow to its reputation in decades: an April charge from the Securities and Exchange Commission of civil fraud over a subprime mortgage-linked security.

Goldman denies any wrongdoing, but the episode has led lawmakers and others to query its commitment to a long-cherished principle of putting clients’ interests first.

“A lot of people are surprised by Goldman’s resilience, particularly those of us in the boutique world whose marketing is based on the fact we give independent, unbiased advice,” said Philip Keevil, a senior partner at Compass Advisers.

“But what it comes down to is the strength of the brand — no board of directors, no CFO ever gets condemned for hiring Goldman Sachs,” said Keevil, a former head of international M&A at Salomon Brothers and head of European M&A at Citigroup (C.N)

Goldman has mounted an aggressive effort to retain clients who might be spooked by the SEC allegation that Goldman failed to inform a client about a short-seller’s role in packaging a subprime mortgage-linked security.

“Goldman would still like you to believe the firm is run by Gus Levy or John Whitehead, who was famous for saying, ‘Put the client first and the firm second.’ But now it seems like everybody is a (trading) counterparty,” Keevil said. “However, if you’re prepared to accept that, they do an incredible job.”

Goldman, whose M&A business has been led by London-based U.S. banker Gordon Dyal since 2004, declined to comment on its league-table standing.

A London-based head of M&A, who declined to be identified while discussing a rival, said Goldman’s legal difficulties simply reflected wider pressure on the industry and would not meaningfully hurt its advisory business.

“They are great professionals, they are a tough competitor and I don’t expect them to go anywhere,” this banker said.

MURDOCH

Among the other big Wall Street banks, advice to Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp (NWSA.O) on its $12 billion move to take full control of British satellite broadcaster BSkyB (BSY.L) helped JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM.N) claim top spot for European announced M&A.

JPMorgan ranked third worldwide, as it did last year, while Bank of America Merrill Lynch stood sixth.

Germany’s Deutsche Bank (DBKGn.DE), whose M&A business is run from London by U.S. banker Brett Olsher and Norwegian Henrik Aslaksen, advanced to fourth place from eighth. It leaped to 4th from 18th place in U.S. M&A, helped by advice to telephone company CenturyTel (CTL.N) on its $22 billion takeover of peer Qwest (Q.N) and advice to MetLife Inc (MET.N) on the $15.5 billion takeover of ALICO.

Keefe, Bruyette and Woods analyst Matthew Clark said Deutsche Bank emerged from the financial crisis as a “relative winner” in reputational terms, and has made a sustained effort to boost market share in corporate finance.

Although bankers cautioned against drawing strong conclusions from a thin market in which a few key deals can lead to big swings in rankings, considerable movement was evident elsewhere in the league tables.

Despite a role in the year’s biggest deal — Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim’s consolidation of his telecoms empire via America Movil (AMXL.MX) — Citigroup fell to seventh place globally from fourth a year earlier.

Lazard (LAZ.N), which enjoyed a big role on Kraft-Cadbury last year, also dropped, to 10th from sixth, while UBS (UBSN.VX) and Barclays Capital (BARC.L) claimed top-10 spots after ranking 12th and 11th, respectively, for the first half of 2009.

(Reporting by Quentin Webb; editing by John Wallace)

DEALS-Europe drags global takeovers to six-year slump

LONDON, June 25 (Reuters) – Global merger and acquisition activity in 2010 is off to its worst start in six years, and with economic uncertainty and a sovereign debt crisis in Europe, the second half could be just as disappointing.

As of June 22, global M&A this year was worth just under $976 billion, according to Thomson Reuters data, less than half the value of the first half of 2007, M&A’s peak year, and only moderately higher than the first half of 2004, when M&A was recovering from the dot-com implosion.

While the economic crisis has depressed activity around the world, Europe’s performance was bleakest, with added fears about sovereign debt and a longer recession dragging the region to its worst start in a decade and overshadowing tentative signs of recovery in the United States and Asia-Pacific.

“Weighing on the markets have been issues like the European sovereign debt crisis. The BP catastrophe has (also) impacted world markets and will continue to represent an overhang,” said Jeffrey Kaplan, global head of M&A at Bank of America Merrill Lynch. (BAC.N) <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Take a Look [ID:nN24244594]

Graphic showing regional M&A activity: link.reuters.com/buv45j

Reuters Insider: link.reuters.com/ged93m

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

Volatility and uncertainty have meant that Europe hasn’t been particularly conducive to M&A, said Guiseppe Monarchi, head of M&A for Europe, the Middle East and Africa at Credit Suisse.

“It’s difficult from where we stand today to predict anything more than that we keep going sideways in M&A for the rest of the year,” he said.

First-half European M&A slumped 23 percent year-on-year to $227 billion.

The failure of British insurer Prudential’s $35 billion bid for American International Group Inc’s (AIG.N) Asian insurance unit particularly depressed the region’s total.

The deal, an audacious transaction reminiscent of a bull market, was scuttled when shareholders balked at the price Prudential’s (PRU.L) relatively new management was preparing to pay.

The picture was not quite so dismal in the United States, where first-half M&A fell just 5 percent to $339 billion and accounted for six of the year’s top 10 deals.

“Comparative statistics for the first half are distorted because of the significant government-related M&A last year. If you pro forma the data, the statistics are more compelling,” said Lee LeBrun, co-head of Americas M&A at UBS.

The value of deals worldwide in 2009, for example, was inflated by the UK government’s investments in Lloyd’s Banking Group and Royal Bank of Scotland.

In an ominous sign for the second half, deals slowed in mid-May through June as companies were reluctant to pull the trigger in the face of macro-economic uncertainty, said Gary Posternack, head of M&A for the Americas at Barclays Capital (BARC.L).

“However, most of the transactions which have been put on hold have not been shelved entirely and could very well return,” he said.

M&A in Asia-Pacific was down 1.1 percent to just under $186 billion, with the United States and Britain dominating large cross-border business as the most acquisitive nations.

EMERGING BRIGHT SPOTS

Companies that have spent the last two years conserving cash will be in the best position to lead a recovery in M&A, although how soon that will happen remains unclear.

“There are two trends ahead. Our clients are thinking, can we go outside our core markets to find higher growth, or can we find bargains — undervalued assets in mature markets,” said Hernan Cristerna, head of M&A for Europe, the Middle East and Africa at JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM.N), which tops the advisory ranking for Europe this year.

Deals in the telecoms, media and technology sectors have exemplified the former trend.

Spain’s Telefonica (TEF.MC), hit by stagnating sales at home, is offering a hefty premium to buy out its partner Portugal Telecom (PTC.LS) and take full control of Vivo (VIVO4.SA), their lucrative joint venture in Brazil.

French giant Vivendi (VIV.PA) approached Kuwait’s Zain (ZAIN.KW) to buy Zain’s African telecom business but was eventually outbid by India’s Bharti (BRTI.BO). Consolidation in the emerging markets has added another layer of competition for western companies seeking strategic assets.

U.S. food conglomerate Kraft (KFT.N) raised expectations about opportunistic bids with its purchase of Cadbury, especially acquisitions of European companies by U.S. peers, helped by the strength of the dollar against the euro and sterling.

News Corp’s (NWSA.O) $12 billion proposal to take full control of British satellite broadcaster BSKyB (BSY.L) is a sign that more opportunistic pursuits may be in the pipeline.

“The market is certainly better than last year, with more $1 billion-plus deals, and we expect M&A will continue to accelerate,” said JPMorgan’s Cristerna. (Reporting by Victoria Howley; additional reporting by Quentin Webb, Paritosh Bansal and Jessica Hall; Editing by John Wallace and Steve Orlofsky)

PRESS DIGEST – Wall Street Journal – June 24

(Reuters) – The following were the top stories in The Wall Street Journal on Thursday. Reuters has not verified these stories and does not vouch for their accuracy.

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* Chancellor Angela Merkel roundly rebuffed U.S. President Barack Obama’s call for Germans to aid the global recovery by spending more and relying less on exports, even as she warned that Europe’s own financial crisis is far from over.

* BP Plc (BP.L) and other big oil companies based their plans for responding to a big oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico on U.S. government projections that gave very low odds of oil hitting shore, even in the case of a spill much larger than the current one.

* Private-equity firm Providence Equity Partners has held preliminary discussions with Hasbro Inc (HAS.N), one of the world’s largest toymakers, to take the company private in a leveraged buyout, people familiar with the matter said.

* The majority of Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee members voted to keep policy on hold in June, but Andrew Sentance called for a rate increase, marking the first time in almost two years that a policy maker has voted for tightening.

* The Federal Reserve offered a subdued assessment of the U.S. economy Wednesday and affirmed that short-term interest rates would remain near zero for “an extended period,” which most economists now believe could mean well into 2011 and possibly into 2012.

* Independent film studio The Weinstein Co has agreed to a major debt restructuring that gives Goldman Sachs Group Inc (GS.N) and an insurance company possession of more than 200 films in its library, including “The Road” and “Halloween II.”

* American International Group Inc (AIG.N) has changed its compensation structure for its most highly paid employees, potentially making their income more secure while the insurance giant tries to repay its bailout.

* Vindi Banga, the former Unilever Plc (ULVR.L) top executive who announced his resignation from the consumer-goods giant in March, has been hired as operating partner in the London office of private-equity firm Clayton, Dubilier & Rice.

* Fiat SpA (FIA.MI) will resume talks with unions after failing to convince enough workers to accept its demands on working conditions in exchange for investing 700 million euro ($859 million) in their plant in southern Italy.

* The European Commission proposed a compromise on legislation that will overhaul the European Union’s supervision of financial firms, hoping to break an impasse over how much power new EU-wide agencies should be given to regulate the industry.

* During Russian President Dmitry Medvedev’s visit Wednesday to the headquarters of Cisco Systems Inc (CSCO.O), the company pledged to invest $1 billion over ten years in technology projects in Russia.

* One of the world’s biggest coins is to go on auction Friday, put on the market by Wolfgang Auer von Welsbach whose financial ruin was exposed by the same crisis that has made big chunks of gold a hot item among Austria’s traditionally conservative investors.

Pay czar Feinberg turns from bankers to BP

(Reuters) – As U.S. public outrage turns from banker pay to the massive BP oil spill, the government is again calling in a man with a reputation for dealing with sticky financial situations — Kenneth Feinberg.

Green Business | Barack Obama | Gulf Oil Spill

Feinberg gained national attention when dispensing hundreds of millions of dollars to victims of the September 11, 2001 attacks. His latest role will be to oversee a $20 billion special fund that BP Plc has agreed to set up to pay damage claims from the spill.

The new role comes as his responsibilities as the Obama administration’s pay czar diminish.

Feinberg, an arbitration lawyer, was brought in as “special master” for compensation in June 2009 as public anger simmered over big bonuses awarded at taxpayer bailed-out firms like American International Group.

Feinberg, who has a booming voice and a flair for the dramatic, has navigated that minefield well, by most accounts.

He has been hailed for soothing the egos of Wall Street executives clutching on to big paychecks, while still looking tough to a general public shocked by massive payouts to firms on a government lifeline.

One statistic cited by his admirers to show his success — 84 percent of the top earners at bailed-out firms under Feinberg’s scrutiny have stayed with the companies, as of March.

Feinberg is not without his detractors. Bank of America blasted his pay rulings last year, saying they were causing other firms to poach its workers. Anastasia Kelly quit her job as AIG’s general counsel in protest over pay curbs Feinberg imposed.

THE NEXT CHALLENGE

But the scope of Feinberg’s high-profile pay czar job has lessened as more big firms have paid back taxpayers. As he takes on his new role, Feinberg still has to issue in the comings weeks his findings from his review of past compensation at 419 firms that received bailout funds, including JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs.

Feinberg’s latest challenge takes him away from Wall Street and back to Main Street anguish.

Millions of gallons of oil have gushed into the Gulf of Mexico since an April 20 explosion of an offshore rig killed 11 workers and ruptured a BP well.

The spill, the biggest in U.S. history, has soiled 120 miles of U.S. coastline, imperiled multibillion-dollar fishing and tourism industries, and killed birds, sea turtles and dolphins.

It has also turned on the tap for what is certain to be a long outpouring of damages claims. The escrow fund agreed to by the Obama administration and BP follows complaints from Gulf Coast residents that the claims process was too long and complicated and that BP was paying out too little money.

Feinberg is no stranger to high-stakes emotions and payouts. He was adept in handling the September 11th victims’ fund and the fund for victims of the 2007 shootings at Virginia Tech, according to people who worked with him.

When news of Feinberg’s new role hit on Wednesday, New York Senator Charles Schumer was quick to sing his praises.

“The victims can be confident that real help is on the way with someone as fair, diligent and sympathetic as Ken Feinberg running this fund,” Schumer said in a statement. “I believe when Feinberg completes his mission here, the people in the Gulf will feel the same way.”

Feinberg declined to comment.

Feinberg, the son of a tire merchant, has been on the Washington scene for decades.

Feinberg, who is 64, has described himself as an “average student at rough-and-tumble Brockton High School” in Massachusetts, but excelled at the University of Massachusetts.

After college, Feinberg entertained the idea of pursuing an acting career. His father told him to play Hamlet in front of juries instead. He attended law school at New York University.

Despite his regular forays into high-profile work for the government, he maintains his private law practice, Feinberg Rozen LLP, located a couple of blocks from the White House.

(Additional reporting by Jeff Mason, Editing by Kristin Roberts and Frances Kerry)

HK’s Richard Li risks losing Bulgarian telco – paper

June 15 (Reuters) – Telecom and media tycoon Richard Li’s private equity fund may lose control of a debt-laden Bulgarian telecommunications operator as junior lenders are battling to take it over, a newspaper reported on Tuesday.

Stocks | Mergers & Acquisitions | Bonds | Global Markets | Funds News | ETFs News | Private Capital

Vivacom, Bulgaria’s biggest fixed-line operator, was set to breach agreements on its 1.64 billion euros ($2 billion) in loans by the end of the month, the South China Morning Post reported.

Controlling shareholder PineBridge Investments, the buyout firm owned by PCCW Ltd (0008.HK) Chairman Li, wanted to restructure the company’s debt in a deal that would cause the so-called mezzanine lenders to lose all of the 325 million euros they are owed, the newspaper said.

The debtholders, including U.S. hedge fund Tennenbaum Capital Partners and French insurer AXA’s (AXAF.PA) private equity arm, wanted to take a majority stake in the company by swapping their loans for shares, the newspaper said, citing people involved in discussions.

High-interest mezzanine debt carries limited legal rights in debt restructurings, but these lenders insisted they had a stronger position than PineBridge, the paper said.

Li took control of Vivacom when he bought PineBridge from U.S. insurer American International Group Inc (AIG.N) in March. The fund lead a consortium that invested 460 million euros in Vivacom in August 2007.

Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS.L) and Deutsche Bank (DBKGn.DE), which lead a group of senior lenders owed 1 billion euros by Vivacom, would judge who wins the fight and make a decision by the end of this week, a person involved in the talks told the newspaper.

As Vivacom’s senior lenders want the 1 billion euro debt cut to 800 million euros, PineBridge has asked the banks to write off 200 million euros from their debt load.

A group of so-called “second lien” lenders, owed 200 million euros, had been asked to exchange their debts for Vivacom shares, but PineBridge had not proposed giving the mezzanine lenders anything, the report said. ($1=.8182 Euro) (Reporting by Maggie Lu Yueyang; Editing by Chris Lewis)

AIG says amends terms of stalled Taiwan unit sale

June 11 (Reuters) – American International Group (AIG.N) and the buyers of its Taiwan Nan Shan insurance unit have modified the terms of the $2.2 billion deal to try and speed up its passage by Taiwan’s regulators, AIG said on Friday.

Stocks | Mergers & Acquisitions | Global Markets | Financials

AIG said that under the amendment, $325 million of the purchase price will be placed in escrow for four years on completion of the deal, as an additional measure of support for Nan Shan’s capital position.

AIG agreed to sell Nan Shan to conglomerate China Strategic (0235.HK) and Hong Kong-based financial services firm Primus Financial in October.

It has not been able to close the deal on concerns in Taiwan that the buyers were backed by mainland Chinese money and did not have the experience to run Taiwan’s No.3 life insurer by market share with more than 4 million policy holders.

(Reporting by Jonathan Standing; Editing by Erica Billingham)

PRESS DIGEST – New York Times business news – June 8

(Reuters) – The following were the top stories in the New York Times business pages on Tuesday. Reuters has not verified these stories and does not vouch for their accuracy.

Stocks | Global Markets | Funds News | ETFs News

* Honda Motor (7267.T) said Tuesday that another parts factory in southern China has stopped production after many of its 600 workers went on strike, just days after the Japanese automaker agreed to raise salaries for Chinese employees who walked out at a transmission plant.

* Countrywide Home Loans and its mortgage servicing unit, which are now part of Bank of America Corp (BAC.N), agreed on Monday to pay $108 million to settle federal charges that the company overcharged customers who were struggling to hang onto their homes.

* Seeking to fend off intensifying competition from Google Inc (GOOG.O) and others in the smartphone business, Apple Inc (AAPL.O) introduced a new version of the iPhone on Monday that includes a front-facing camera for video chats.

* The commission investigating the causes of the financial crisis said on Monday that it had subpoenaed Goldman Sachs Group Inc (GS.N) and harshly accused the investment bank of trying to delay and disrupt its inquiry.

* Hungary’s center-right government pledged on Monday to contain its budget deficit and to cut spending as it continued to backtrack from its previous suggestions that the country was in danger of suffering a Greek-style crisis and defaulting on its debt.

* The American economy will probably be slow to recover, with joblessness remaining high for some time, Ben Bernanke, the chairman of the Federal Reserve, said on Monday evening.

* The chairman of the insurance giant Prudential Plc (PRU.L) apologized on Monday for the costs incurred by the failed takeover of American International Group Inc’s (AIG.N) Asian business, but he rejected calls for him and the chief executive, Tidjane Thiam, to resign.

* An ethics watchdog group filed a challenge on Monday against two members of a new federal advisory committee for tobacco product safety, saying they should be disqualified because they are consultants for drug companies that make smoking cessation products.

* The owner of Kroll, one of the best-known providers of corporate investigative services, agreed on Monday to sell the firm to Altegrity, another security specialist, for $1.13 billion in cash.

* Chrysler is recalling almost 600,000 minivans and Jeep Wranglers in the United States and another 100,000 overseas because of brake or wiring problems that could create safety issues, the company and federal regulators said Monday.