Nice piece on Warburg Pincus
Amid all the high-flying deals in buyout land, Warburg Pincus has been selective in its acquisitions, and that's just the way it likes it.
This blog dissects Wall Street by providing readers to some of the best articles and insight available on the web. The site will also discuss the University of Chicago GSB experience and matters related to the MBA community.
Amid all the high-flying deals in buyout land, Warburg Pincus has been selective in its acquisitions, and that's just the way it likes it.
One of the more successful middle market investment banking practices has been Richmond Virginia based Harris Williams. The below article is a nice summary of the practice's growth and prospects for the future. One of the more interesting things about Harris Williams is that it recently sold its business to PNC, one of the nations largest commercial banks. Historically, acquisitions of investment banks have not been the most fruitful of tie-ups. It is yet to be determined how succesful Harris Williams will be as a part of a large conglomerate.
See the article below.
Harris Williams Continues Rapid Growth As Middle-Market Investment Banker
By |
Harris Williams & Co. (HW) is on a roll. In 2005, the 15-year-old middle-market M&A sell-side investment bank, based in Richmond, VA, recorded another record year in revenues - representing a continuous stretch of annual increases since its founding, with the exception of 2001.
In the past 18 months alone, Harris Williams has completed more than 70 transactions, with an average deal size of about $125 million - meaning total transaction value greater thatn $8.75 billion.
The firm, which also has offices in San Francisco (since 1999) and Boston (since 2002), as well as new offices in Philadelphia and Minneapolis, is one of the largest U.S. investment banks focused exclusively on middle market companies, with deal sizes in the $50 million to $500 million range. With its increasing number of offices, it has a growing nationwide presence, representing private equity groups as well as publicly and privately held companies both in the U.S. and worldwide.
HW represents selling companies in a broad range of industries. The deals involve firms that are either being acquired as strategic acquisitions by operating companies, or as portfolio investments by private equity firms.
Further enhancing its market reach, in October 2005, Harris Williams was acquired by PNC Financial Services Group, based in Philadelphia, one of the nation's largest financial institutions. The transaction created a win-win for both organizations: HW can leverage PNC's broad middle market relationships, and PNC can draw on HW's accumulated middle market investment banking experience and capabilities.
Related to its new affiliation with PNC, Harris Williams opened its Philadelphia office in January. And in early March, it announced the hiring of Glenn Gurtcheff, formerly the co-head of Piper Jaffray's middle market mergers and acquisitions group, to open the new Minneapolis office.
HW's success is reflected in a number of statistics provided by the firm:
• A very high deals-initiated-to-deals-closed ratio of 90%;
• Staff tenure averaging about 8 years, reflecting significantly lower turnover than other firms in its industry;
• Staff size, now over 100, has been doubling every 2-3 years.
Many Deals in the Northeast
Harris Williams' four-year-old Boston office has contributed significantly to the firm's continued growth, particularly in technology-related transactions. Transactions completed by that office's investment bankers will often have one or more parties to the deal that are based in the Northeast region.
For example in late December, HW advised WordWave, Inc. in its sale to Merrill Corp. (www. merrillcorp.com). WordWave, Boston, is an international provider of litigation support, captioning and subtitling, and court reporting and transcription services. WordWave's litigation support division, LegaLink is a global leader in court reporting, legal videography and trial services.
What Accounts for Harris Williams' Successful Growth?
In explaining the firm's significant growth in the past several years, Kim Baker, HW's marketing director, said, "Our success has largely been due to the fact that Harris Williams was a pioneer in middle market investment banking. The bulge-bracket investment banks had consistently been focused on doing the larger, more glamorous deals, while the middle market hasn't been fully mined for its deal-making potential. Although the larger firms have now begun to recognize that potential, there continues to be a real opportunity for HW to bring credibility and enhanced deal-making capabilities to the middle market."
In a recent interview with American Venture, Phil Ivey, an HW managing director who has been with the firm's Boston office practically since 2002, discussed the background he brings to the firm, and how his team in Boston – and the firm overall -- operates to deliver value for their clients.
Ivey says that HW's Boston office has helped the firm win an increasingly larger share of the reinvigorated technology M&A market in the Northeast. "There's no substitute for being on the ground in the region – being able to meet the principals, the lenders and equity investors in the area," he says.
In addition to the firm's bringing on board many experienced M&A professionals, Ivey says an additional factor promoting good deal-making is the increasing degree of "institutionalized knowledge" that continues to accumulate within the firm. That accumulated knowledge includes a formalized, proprietary database of deals done and institutional and strategic buyers, he says. "The culture of the firm enables us to share the knowledge very effectively," he says.
The British-born Ivey brings with him a substantial degree of financial service and middle market investment banking experience, He took his undergraduate degree in math and statistics at the University of Bristol in the UK, and his MBA in marketing at Northwestern University's Kellogg Graduate School of Business in Chicago.
Ivey has a strong background in financial services and consulting, dating back to the late 1980s, when he worked for UBS Securities in London. Beginning in the 1990s, he did sell-side investment banking for Tucker Anthony, which was later acquired by RBC Dain.
Later, he did consulting and transactional work in the financial services sector for the consulting division of accounting firm KPMG, which later spun off the unit, now known as Bearing Point.
Projecting out into the remainder of 2006, Ivey remains optimistic. "From our vantage point, the coming year looks pretty strong," he says. "We're seeing a tremendous amount of attractive deal flow – perhaps equivalent to our record year in 2005."
The esteemed Henry Paulson was interviewed by the WSJ in today's issue. See the article below.
Goldman CEO
Tackles Critics,
Touchy Issues
At Goldman Sachs Group Inc.'s last annual meeting, a shareholder blasted Chief Executive Henry Paulson Jr. for being an environmental do-gooder who isn't as focused on the firm's core business as he should be. Mr. Paulson defended himself, saying if there is one thing shareholders would agree on it's that Goldman is good at making money.
The firm had record annual profit of $5.63 billion in 2005 and its shares are soaring. Goldman is the world's leading provider of merger advice.
But Goldman also gets criticized for the way it makes its billions. Often, the global securities giant deploys its own capital to make big market bets for itself or take stakes in companies. This strategy is emblematic of what is going on across Wall Street -- more and more firms are putting their own money at risk to boost profits. By having more skin in the game, critics wonder if Wall Street firms, such as Goldman, are putting their interests ahead of clients. It's an assertion that gets Mr. Paulson hot under the collar.
Mr. Paulson, 60 years old, graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Dartmouth in 1968 with a major in English literature and All-East laurels as a tackle on the football team. He cut his teeth at Goldman as an investment banker in Chicago. He has worked at Goldman 32 years and has run the firm since 1999.
He recently sat down in his top-floor office at Goldman's Manhattan headquarters to discuss the firm's success, its critics and the challenges ahead. He also addressed his future plans, including an oft-rumored post in the Bush administration, and explains why he once brought a bird to work.
WSJ: There is a lot happening on Wall Street these days, and not all of it is positive. What is the biggest challenge facing Goldman these days?
Mr. Paulson: Managing growth. Since 1999 the number of people we have has roughly doubled, as has our revenue, and our capital base has gone up four times. All this is good. But there's no doubt that our culture likes things small. So the key ... is maintaining a very strong culture, staying entrepreneurial despite our current size. We spend a lot of time thinking how to do a better job of institutionalizing some of the processes that we were able to do on more of an entrepreneurial basis when we were smaller.
WSJ: Goldman was recently in the news when one of its employees and a former employee were ensnared in an insider-trading case. Are these the type of issues part of the growing pains?
Mr. Paulson: There's always some probability, no matter how hard we try, that we're going to hire some bad people. We have got 24,000 employees. Towns of that size have a jail. Hopefully, we have a better screening process but we are still very embarrassed that we had that person at Goldman Sachs.
WSJ: Tell us a little bit about your plans for the future. There is a lot of talk that you are a candidate for Treasury Secretary.
Mr. Paulson: I love my job. I actually think I've got the best job in the business world. I plan to be here for a good while and I'm very focused on the challenges we've got in front of us at Goldman Sachs.
WSJ: You talk about how important your clients are. But probably more than any other Wall Street firm people accuse Goldman of competing with its clients. You have a private-equity arm that makes investments. How do you manage it when client A calls up and says, "Why are you bidding for ABC Telecom Co. against us?"
Mr. Paulson: I strongly disagree with your assertion. We look to co-invest with our clients. Our clients, by and large, are very sophisticated. And so when our clients ask us to perform a role they are pretty thoughtful about it, and they're doing it based upon our history of being able to manage conflicts and potential conflicts.
I do believe that the way in which we manage the conflicts and perceived conflicts is critical to our reputation and we would not have the market share we have and the client relationships we have if we weren't able to manage those in a way in which it meets the high standards we set.
WSJ: Still, your firm continues to make headlines on this issue. In 2005, you acted as adviser to both the New York Stock Exchange and Archipelago Holdings when they merged. The CEO of the NYSE is a former Goldman president. People were outraged.
Mr. Paulson: I think that's a very good example of something that we don't think was a conflict. I'm gratified that deal has been recognized by the market for how great it was for the New York Stock Exchange and more importantly for the capital markets. We'll look back on that in a number of years and say, it is one of the few things we have played a role in that has made such a significant difference.
I think it is generally known we came up with the idea. The boards of each client very much wanted Goldman Sachs, and we agreed to work with them in developing the business model, figuring out how to put the two companies together. They didn't just ask, they insisted that we do that on a sole basis early on. It was very important to keep the transaction confidential. Also, we did not advise either side on price.
In addressing conflicts there is another issue at play: public perception. Does it appear appropriate? I have to tell you we are increasingly aware of that.
WSJ: Goldman has internal hedge funds and makes a lot of money using its own money to wager on the market. Your critics say Goldman is just one big hedge fund. Are they right?
Mr. Paulson: I think that's ridiculous. We are very much a client-driven firm. We are very good advisers. We have client relationships that are second to none. We're good investors, and we've got a first-rate team that knows how to anticipate market change and respond to client needs. I think that when people say, you know, gee, you're like a hedge fund, they look at the securities businesses and its results and so much of it comes under sales and trading. But the vast majority of that is us performing our role as a financial intermediary and taking risk to help clients make investments or execute transactions. That's very different from the role of a hedge fund.
WSJ: A lot of your business now comes from outside the U.S. What concern do you have about the growing backlash against foreign investment?
Mr. Paulson: There's not just a backlash outside of the U.S. There is a backlash inside the U.S. The way I think about it is that if the last 20 years have shown us anything, it's that there's no good alternative to globalization. What the last 20 years have shown is those countries that have opened themselves up to globalization have benefited. The others have been left behind.
In the U.S. we have benefited more from free trade and global competition than any country in the world. But yet, at a time when our economy is growing and new jobs are being created, there's still quite a protectionist sentiment here. I really believe that we need to be better at articulating the benefits of globalization to society and better at acknowledging the shortcomings and addressing them.
WSJ: Goldman is heavily invested in a number of countries, notably China. What is the next country Goldman might look at?
Mr. Paulson: I've been to China about 70 times since the end of 1990. I just got back from the Middle East. There are huge amounts of capital in that region. They have much more capital than investing opportunities. So there are real opportunities there.
Business in Germany is picking up. That economy is definitely stronger. We not only have India and China growing, but also Korea and Japan. In Latin America, whoever thought we'd see Brazil growing and with a surplus that's 6% of GDP?
WSJ: Everyone on Wall Street brags about how good they are at risk controls. What makes you different?
Mr. Paulson: We spend an enormous amount of time on risk controls. We look at all kinds of scenarios. For example we study market, credit and operational risks. But we're realistic enough to say that we don't know when there's going be a global financial crisis, or some kind of global shock. And when that comes, market positions that aren't supposed to correlate will correlate. Because many of us have similar positions, the things we thought were going to be liquid will be illiquid, and in some cases the reverse will be true.
When you deal with something like that, the most important thing you can do is have excess liquidity, and we do. In 1998, when we went through the last shock, because we had excess liquidity, we were able to maintain our strategy, hire people from our competitors and invested in Asia immediately.
In recent months there has been a lot of talk about your support of various environmental causes. It is true you once brought a live bird to a staff meeting?
Not exactly. I was chairman of the Peregrine Fund and they do captive breeding and releases of endangered raptors, originally the Peregrine Falcon... They were doing some fund-raising and I had people from the Peregrine Fund come by the office with a falcon.
Write to Susanne Craig at susanne.craig@wsj.com
The barbarians at the gate that sparked the LBO boom 25-30 years ago now are dealing with succession issues, writes the Deal in a special feature article.
An article that I had meant to point readers to from the WSJ is pasted below. It sheds light on the ultra secretive Global Alpha. It's quite a story on how these guys came together, but more fascinating is the results they have produced. See below.
So it's been a few days since I have posted with interesting thoughts and articles on the markets, and the delay is primarily because I was in Hyde Park for most of the weekend. University of Chicago had its "Admit Weekend" for accepted students to the full-time MBA program, and I was one of the many who attended with the hopes of getting a better feeling for the school that I would be attending this fall. I had not paid my deposit yet, but I was 100% certain that I would be attending the school, so for me there was little convincing the school had to do. But for many other attendees, the Admit Weekend was a time to get a feel for the school before making the big decision. Personally, I feel that most people know where they want to be and that a campus visit does very little to sway them either way. But that's just my opinion.Overall, Admit Weekend was a blast. Both the current students as well as the admitted students were approachable and interesting. The weekend included informational sessions on the school and it's programs, Q&A with students, and social functions where everyone got to know their peers in a less intense atmosphere.I decided to sign up for the Random Walk trip experience. Check out the site here.
The buzz in PE land the past few days has been on KKR's plans to launch a public buyout fund that would be traded on an Amsterdam (Euronext) Exchange.
Interesting article that discusses how industry experts feel the financial markets will look 10 years from now.
Sometimes too much of a good thing is indeed too much.
At the same time, the country has attracted more overseas investors, who poured $10.7 billion into Indian equities in 2005, and $4.13 billion in just the first quarter of this year.
But analysts and fund managers are cautioning that the stock market pendulum may have swung too far, and they warn that some companies are highly overvalued.
As a result of such concerns, the Sensex recorded a two-day decline of 3.6 percent last Wednesday and Thursday, the steepest in six months. The markets were closed Friday for Good Friday, but investors saw a buying opportunity Monday, sending the index up 2.7 percent."
The surprising 15% investment in the LSE made by NASDAQ scared many NDAQ investors, as they wondered where the $800 million would come from to make the purchase. Nasdaq has announced that Bank of America had provided some of the financing.
"Nasdaq has effectively put a floor on the share price at least in the short term," said one hedge fund manager who declined to be identified.
Chesapeake Partners Management Co, Eton Park International LLP, D.E. Shaw & Co and Halcyon Asset Management LLC are among the largely U.S.-based funds to reveal stakes in the LSE over the last few days. The stakes have been built mainly through purchases of contracts for difference or swaps.
"Whether they (Nasdaq) decide to hold onto the stake for six months or longer ... The risk-reward of owning LSE shares has changed because of that stake. There is not as much risk," the hedge fund manager said.
The great Sandy Weill is in his last days at Citi as the behemoth's chairman. What a ride it's been for the company and its shareholders.
See the article.
Goldman Sachs was also involved in a consortium that made an offer for Mitchells & Butlers, the UK pub chain operator, which then turned hostile.
The bank also backed bids for UK television network ITV (ITV.L) and Associated British Ports (ABP.L).
Goldman's move highlights the increasing conflicts investment banks face in their roles as advisers and investors in M&A activity that frequently involves private equity firms."
CNNMoney reports that MBAs are looking hard for tech jobs again. Google is 2nd on the wishlist of MBAs. Last year it wasn't even on the survey but got many write-ins.
The talk of the markets yesterday was Tivo and the blockbuster ruling that a federal judge granted it for its patent infringement case against Echostar Communications.
The WSJ has, for the past two days, had a prominent article on the prospect of Bear Stearns partnering up with a China Construction Bank. The Journal alludes to discussions between the venerable Jimmy Cayne and Ace Greenberg and China Construction Bank officials that have centered on the possibility that CCB could invest $4 billion in the Wall Street firm in the form of convertible bonds. CCB has denied the rumors.
The Bausch and Lomb saga continues. Many are questioning if the Company has taken enough action to ensure that people aren't buying its products.
Reuters had an article stating that the NYSE may be in talks with the London Stock Exchange regarding an acquisition. This comes on the heels of a filing in which the NYSE stated that it is involved in discussions with another exchange regarding a deal. A deal with the LSE may be difficult given that the NASDAQ recently announced that it owns 15% of the LSE. This 15% stake, which the Nasdaq purchased from Threadneedle Asset Management, makes NDAQ the largest shareholder in the LSE. Given that the Nasdaq and NYSE are chief rivals, it makes you wonder how easy a deal between the NYSE and LSE would be.
It could be any number of exchanges, so speculation is mounting.
Well it seems like everyone loves this UBS - Piper deal. If you don't remember, Piper announced a few days ago that it would be selling its "private client"(i.e. retail brokerage operation) to UBS for $500 million.
This BusinessWeek article provides more insight on Nasdaq's purchase of 15% of the LSE.
Every banker's email was hit with the email from banker buddies regarding the ridiculous insider trading scheme that some young bankers at wall street shops were involved in.
Scary, and yet compelling, arguments made in this interesting Street.com article.
Pretty Ridiculous.
Prosecutors charged that the conspiracy involved two widespread and highly lucrative trading schemes created by Eugene Plotkin and David Pajcin, both formally of Goldman Sachs.
Also named as defendants in the case were Stanislav Shpigelman, an investment banking analyst in the mergers and acquisitions division of Merrill Lynch, and Juan Renteria, who worked at a printing plant where Business Week magazine was produced.
"The Nasdaq on Tuesday disclosed that it had acquired slightly less than 15 percent of the London exchange’s shares, paying a total of $782 million. Most of the shares came from Threadneedle Asset Management. Threadneedle had previously been the London exchange’s largest shareholder, making it an important power broker in any attempt to acquire the exchange. Now, Threadneedle is out of the picture, with its entire stake in Nasdaq’s hands."
In another sign of consolidation in the brokerage space, UBS is expected to announce that it will acquire Piper Jaffray's private client arm for approximately $500 million. Piper's Private Client arm includes "more than 800 financial advisors and 550 branch support personnel in approximately 90 retail offices in 17 Midwest, Mountain and Western states."
First Greenhill, then Lazard, then Thomas Weisel, and now perhaps JMP Securities will pursue an IPO as a boutique investment bank.
24 fans can rejoice, as Kiefer Sutherland signed a 3 year contract with Fox and the 24 producers. Estimates are that the package is worth $40 mm over the 3 years. Not too shabby.
This is exactly what should be happening. See the WSJ article link here or, if no subscription, see it pasted below. With Disney/ABC's venture people can watch tv shows at their leisure on the net, but are forced to view the commercials. I am surprised it took this long for anyone to break into this idea. One negative to all this is that tivo is going to get crunched pretty bad if others networks follow. Why use tivo when you can watch it all online at your leisure anyway?
Disney Will Offer
Many TV Shows
Free on the Web
ABC's Prime-Time Hits
And Zap-Proof Commercials
Are Pillars of Bold Strategy
By BROOKS BARNES
April 10, 2006; Page A1
Walt Disney Co. plans to make much of its newest and most popular programming on ABC and other channels available free anytime on the Web, in a move that could speed the transformation of television viewing habits and help revive the struggling TV advertising business.
On April 30, ABC will unveil a revamped Web site that will include a "theater" where people with broadband connections can watch free episodes of "Desperate Housewives," "Lost" and other hit shows on their computers. Episodes will be available the morning after they air and will be archived so people can eventually view a whole season. A Disney Channel version with five shows will start in June, and an ABC Family version is also planned. Disney's Soapnet cable channel will start offering programs free on its Web site, Soapnetic, on April 17.
Episodes of the ABC shows -- which can be paused, rewound and fast-forwarded -- will contain commercial breaks that viewers can't skip, making Disney hopeful it has figured out a way to turn the delivery of programs over the Web into a profit-generating business. Ten advertisers, including Ford Motor Co., Procter & Gamble, Universal Pictures and Unilever, already have signed up.
The initiative, to be announced today by Anne Sweeney, president of the Disney-ABC Television Group, marks a watershed: the first time a TV company is offering major prime-time shows free online without restriction. Until now, networks have brokered limited piecemeal deals in a bid to keep business partners happy and their traditional business models intact. CBS Corp. has come the closest to what Disney is planning, offering rentals of "Survivor" episodes on CBS.com for 99 cents.
But so far, none of the other big TV networks have hinted at plans comparable to ABC's. The strategy at CBS is to make its TV shows available on as many platforms as possible -- including cellphones -- while General Electric Co.'s NBC Universal is developing unique programming for the Internet. News Corp.'s Fox is seeking to move shows online in a way that shares revenue with affiliates.
Nearly anyone with a computer and a broadband connection will be able to watch Disney's TV offerings online. Still, Disney is putting such a huge volume of programming online that some analysts say it could spur sales of media-rich computers, as well as devices that transmit Internet content to be watched on most types of TV sets. "All this area needs to explode is enough top-notch content," says Brad Adgate, senior vice president at Horizon Media, a
Online streaming -- the technology of broadcasting video programming over the Web -- has been an area of great untapped potential for the TV industry. The possibilities were underscored by the success of CBS's online streaming of the NCAA basketball tournament in recent weeks. The "cable bypass," as CBS Chief Executive Leslie Moonves calls it, could have dire implications for cable and satellite purveyors because it has the potential to cut off the revenue they receive for delivering programming. Making shows available online also could undercut the on-demand services cable operators are rolling out.
The ABC initiative reflects a sharp turnaround at Disney's television unit. Two years ago, ABC was the last-place network, and cable properties such as ABC Family were in a slump. Then Chief Executive Robert Iger, who has become unexpectedly aggressive in digital media, grouped all of the company's TV units under one umbrella.
Disney's Ms. Sweeney installed a new management team and streamlined operations from creative development to marketing and publicity. The result has been the launch of monster hits across the division, from "Grey's Anatomy" on ABC to the Disney Channel's "High School Musical." Just two new shows -- "Desperate Housewives" and "Lost" -- are expected to generate $1 billion in syndication revenue over the next five years.
"It would have required excruciating coordination before the merger," Ms. Sweeney says. "When you take down the walls and everybody on the team is living in the same world, things can happen quickly."
Offering so much content online will probably ruffle some feathers. ABC affiliates, long accustomed to exclusive broadcast rights to new shows, are already griping that they don't profit from the network's deal with Apple. It could also fuel a fight with
Other networks and studios with more conservative philosophies about opening their film and TV vaults might feel pressured to emulate Disney. Apple, by contrast, is unlikely to feel much of a threat because consumers won't be able to download the free programs onto portable devices.
Though Disney doesn't believe offering shows online will undercut DVD sales, big retail partners such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc. may argue otherwise. Disney's strategy also includes eventually offering permanent downloads. Albert Cheng, executive vice president of digital media for the Disney-ABC Television Group, says the company is exploring allowing viewers to download shows for various fees. For example, a show with no ads might cost $1.99, while a show with fewer ads might cost 99 cents.
Disney refers to the ABC.com launch on April 30 as a test, starting with a handful of programs, including "Alias," "Commander in Chief," and "Lost," eventually expanding the menu.
As part of an effort to engage the online community, viewers from around the country will be able to gather in "rooms" online to watch an episode of, say, "Lost" and chat about it. Disney will also promote the creation of fan sites for various shows. "We want to tie all of these fan sites closer to our brand," Mr. Cheng says.
The ads won't look like typical TV commercials. For starters, instead of five commercial breaks during an hourlong episode, there will be three breaks lasting a minimum of one minute each -- all of them from the same advertiser. Mike Shaw, ABC's president of sales, says viewers will have a choice of what type of ad to watch -- for instance, a traditional video commercial or an interactive "game" commercial.
Mr. Cheng says the company is looking for ways to give affiliates a piece of the action. "Do we share ads? Do we try and push traffic to each other's Web sites? We just haven't nailed down the right formula for that yet," he says.
Key to Disney's online TV strategy is to keep tight control of programs, which rules out partnerships with companies such as Google Inc. that are moving into video on demand. Disney's decision to manage streaming of its programming was reinforced when Google had technical trouble when first offering episodes of CBS's "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation" for rental in January.
"The worst thing you can do is put up one of your great franchises and then have the technology not work and your viewers frustrated," Ms. Sweeney says. CBS has said it considers the experiment to be a low-risk success.
While its ABC hits have the highest profile, Disney wanted to move quickly with Disney Channel and Soapnet offerings, too, because both cable networks have been sizzling of late.
"High School Musical," an original Disney Channel movie that premiered in January, has given the network the best ratings in its 23-year history. Five series will be available in the DisneyChannel.com "theater" at launch, including "Power Rangers" and "Kim Possible."
Soapnetic, the soon-to-launch streaming portal for Soapnet, will offer "I Want to be a Soap Star" and portions of nine soaps, including "Days of Our Lives" and "
Write to Brooks Barnes at brooks.barnes@wsj.com
More exchange merger talk from the Chicago Tribune.
In an interesting study that aimed to analyze how well "smart" people could discern between similar index funds, Wharton undergrads and MBAs as well as Harvard MBAs failed. The test was simple: would people choose the index fund with the lowest fees associated with it, given that each would produce the same "pre-fee" return (tied to the S&P 500)?
The Pritzkers, likely Chicago's richest family, and owners of Hyatt hotels, may be ready to go public, according to the Financial Times.
In a rare interview, Mr Pritzker said Hyatt would be compliant with Sarbanes-Oxley rules for quoted companies by the end of 2006, following a three-year restructuring and consolidation of the family's hospitality investments on a single balance sheet."
"Amit Kapoor, a research analyst with Gabelli & Co, the US fund manager, said a Hyatt IPO could value the group at as much as $11bn."Imperial Sugar, a TX-based sugar refiner has seen its shares triple in the past twelve months. The shares' rise has been due to a rapid increase in the price of sugar as well as the difference in price between unrefined and refined sugar (the margin Imperial can make). However BusinessWeek had an interesting piece that says that shares may fully reflect the best of times at Imperial, and holders may have to prepare for a correction if the sugar boom fades.
The buzz in Washington and likely cocktail parties across America has been the issue of illegal immigration. The issue at hand is figuring out what to do with current illegal, undocumented immigrants and making plans to strengthen border security. BusinessWeek published a nice summary that the S&P put out on the economics of illegal immigration.
Financial Times is reporting that buy-out shops may be trying to create a trade group to represent their interests. Blackstone, KKR, TPG, and Carlyle are said to be spearheading any possible initiative.
As mentioned before, Youtube.com just raised $8 million in A-list VC shop Sequoia capital. Associated Press had a nice article on just how fast Youtube is growing. It's been quite a run for the young website and its owners, and all signs point to more growth. The big question is, what will happen legally? Copyright infringements are abound, which makes many feel as though this could be the next Napster.
BusinessWeek's cover this week is on the lagging blue chips, and more importantly, how their day in the sun may be due. Check it out.
Sam Lieber of Alpine Woods Capital Investors gives his impressions of the housing market as well as some real estate picks. Very nice Barron's interview.