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By Catherine Dodge March 18 (Bloomberg) — U.S. House Democrats defeated an effort by Republicans to curtail Democrats’ options in seeking to pass their $940 billion health-care overhaul. By a 222-203 vote, lawmakers headed off a Republican resolution that would have required a separate, recorded vote on the Senate’s health care plan. The Republicans were seeking to keep Democrats from using a parliamentary technique to avoid a direct vote on that bill. The House may hold a rare Sunday vote March 21 on the Senate health-care bill and a separate package of revisions. The overall plan would extend coverage to 32 million uninsured Americans. House Democratic leaders say they may use a parliamentary technique that would “deem” House members to have passed the Senate bill by voting for the more politically palatable measure containing the revisions. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said earlier this week that bypassing a direct vote on the Senate measure was an option because there are “a lot of people who don’t want to vote for it.” She also said that when Republicans were in power, they used the pass-and-deem approach “hundreds of times.” Republicans, who unanimously oppose the health-care plan, say no bill or amendment has ever been deemed passed that related to an area affecting one-sixth of the economy, as does the health measure. Taking Responsibility Republicans said Democrats are trying to avoid taking responsibility for the health-care plan. President Barack Obama today postponed until June his planned trip to Indonesia and Australia because of the planned House vote on health care, his top domestic priority. If the plan passes the House, the Senate plans to vote on the package of changes next week to complete legislative action, said Jim Manley , a spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid . The legislation potentially would make the biggest health- care changes in four decades. Americans would be required to get insurance, and insurers would have to accept all customers. The House would have to approve the bill passed by the Senate as well as the set of changes to that measure. The pass- and-deem technique would consolidate those two steps, requiring lawmakers to vote only on the changes. To contact the reporter on this story: Catherine Dodge in Washington at cdodge1@bloomberg.net

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Republicans Lose Attempt to Force Up-or-Down Vote on Health-Care Overhaul

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By Ronald Grover and Sarah Rabil March 18 (Bloomberg) — Time Warner Inc. is considering a bid of $1.2 billion to $1.5 billion for the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc. film studio, according to two people with knowledge of the discussions, as second-round offers come due tomorrow. Warner Bros. executives, including Chief Executive Officer Barry Meyer and Chief Operating Officer Alan Horn , will iron out a possible price tomorrow with Time Warner CEO Jeff Bewkes, said one of the people, who declined to be named because the talks are private. Executives at the film studio are pushing for an offer at the higher end of the range, the people said. New York-based Time Warner may decide not to make an offer, the people said. Keith Cocozza , a spokesman for Time Warner, declined to comment. To contact the reporter on this story: Ronald Grover in Los Angeles at rgrover5@bloomberg.net Sarah Rabil in New York at srabil@bloomberg.net

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Time Warner Said to Weigh Metro-Goldwyn Studio Bid of Up to $1.5 Billion

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Malone’s Liberty, Elliott Said to Drop Out of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Bidding

March 18, 2010

By Ronald Grover March 17 (Bloomberg) — John Malone ’s Liberty Media Corp. and hedge fund Elliott Management Corp. have decided not to bid for the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc. movie studio, according to people with knowledge of the bidding. MGM’s value fell below a price Liberty executives believed would be acceptable to the Los Angeles-based studio’s creditors, said two people with knowledge of the Englewood, Colorado-based media company’s plans. New York-based Elliott, working with producer Ryan Kavanaugh ’s Relativity Media, also pulled out, said two people, who sought anonymity because talks are private. The thinning field of potential buyers lessens the chance of a bidding war for the studio, which stopped making payments on $3.7 billion in debt and put itself up for sale last year. Others exploring a second-round bid included billionaire Len Blavatnik’s Access Industries, Time Warner Inc. and Lions Gate Entertainment Corp. , people close to the process said on Feb. 3. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer has set a March 19 deadline for formal offers. Courtnee Ulrich , a spokeswoman for Liberty, declined to comment. Scott Tagliarino , a spokesman for Elliott, declined to comment. Mara Buxbaum, a spokeswoman for Los Angeles-based Relativity, didn’t immediately respond to an e-mailed query. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s $3.7 billion term loan was priced at 54 cents on the dollar today, down from about 55.5 cents early yesterday, according to two people familiar with the market who declined to be identified because the trading is private. Recovery Value The trades imply a recovery value of $2 billion, down from $2.41 billion on Jan. 4, when the loan traded at 65.25 cents. In 2003, Malone withdrew from bidding for Vivendi Universal’s Los Angeles-based operations, including the film studio and theme park. Liberty, owner of the Starz Entertainment pay television service, is evaluating options for its three-year old movie-production unit, Overture Films. Liberty’s Starz tracking stock dropped 28 cents to $51.81 at 4 p.m. New York time in Nasdaq Stock Market trading. The shares have gained 12 percent this year. Liberty Capital rose 60 cents, or 1.8 percent, to $34.85 and is up 46 percent this year. TheWrap.com reported the departure of Elliott and Relativity earlier. In addition to the bidders, News Corp., parent of Twentieth Century Fox, and Qualia Capital LLC, led by Amir Malin and Ken Schapiro , have each proposed restructuring Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s debt and injecting cash to recapitalize the company, people with knowledge of the process said in January. New York-based Qualia’s proposal would involve a $500 million cash infusion to fund operations, and the conversion of some debt to equity, one person said then. Library, ‘Bond’ MGM, created in 1924, owns a film library with 4,100 titles, and controls rights to the “James Bond” franchise. It released one picture in 2009 and has a co-production deal with Warner Bros. on the planned film “The Hobbit,” based on the J.R.R. Tolkien novel. “Hot Tub Time Machine” is set for release on March 26. Sony Corp. , which co-produced and distributed the two most recent Bond films, is interested in distributing future ones or becoming a production partner to MGM or its new owners once a sale is completed, Sony Pictures Entertainment Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Michael Lynton said this week. To contact the reporter on this story: Ronald Grover in Los Angeles at rgrover5@bloomberg.net

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Malone’s Liberty, Elliott Said to Drop Out of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Bidding

March 18, 2010

By Ronald Grover March 17 (Bloomberg) — John Malone ’s Liberty Media Corp. and hedge fund Elliott Management Corp. have decided not to bid for the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc. movie studio, according to people with knowledge of the bidding. MGM’s value fell below a price Liberty executives believed would be acceptable to the Los Angeles-based studio’s creditors, said two people with knowledge of the Englewood, Colorado-based media company’s plans. New York-based Elliott, working with producer Ryan Kavanaugh ’s Relativity Media, also pulled out, said two people, who sought anonymity because talks are private. The thinning field of potential buyers lessens the chance of a bidding war for the studio, which stopped making payments on $3.7 billion in debt and put itself up for sale last year. Others exploring a second-round bid included billionaire Len Blavatnik’s Access Industries, Time Warner Inc. and Lions Gate Entertainment Corp. , people close to the process said on Feb. 3. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer has set a March 19 deadline for formal offers. Courtnee Ulrich , a spokeswoman for Liberty, declined to comment. Scott Tagliarino , a spokesman for Elliott, declined to comment. Mara Buxbaum, a spokeswoman for Los Angeles-based Relativity, didn’t immediately respond to an e-mailed query. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s $3.7 billion term loan was priced at 54 cents on the dollar today, down from about 55.5 cents early yesterday, according to two people familiar with the market who declined to be identified because the trading is private. Recovery Value The trades imply a recovery value of $2 billion, down from $2.41 billion on Jan. 4, when the loan traded at 65.25 cents. In 2003, Malone withdrew from bidding for Vivendi Universal’s Los Angeles-based operations, including the film studio and theme park. Liberty, owner of the Starz Entertainment pay television service, is evaluating options for its three-year old movie-production unit, Overture Films. Liberty’s Starz tracking stock dropped 28 cents to $51.81 at 4 p.m. New York time in Nasdaq Stock Market trading. The shares have gained 12 percent this year. Liberty Capital rose 60 cents, or 1.8 percent, to $34.85 and is up 46 percent this year. TheWrap.com reported the departure of Elliott and Relativity earlier. In addition to the bidders, News Corp., parent of Twentieth Century Fox, and Qualia Capital LLC, led by Amir Malin and Ken Schapiro , have each proposed restructuring Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s debt and injecting cash to recapitalize the company, people with knowledge of the process said in January. New York-based Qualia’s proposal would involve a $500 million cash infusion to fund operations, and the conversion of some debt to equity, one person said then. Library, ‘Bond’ MGM, created in 1924, owns a film library with 4,100 titles, and controls rights to the “James Bond” franchise. It released one picture in 2009 and has a co-production deal with Warner Bros. on the planned film “The Hobbit,” based on the J.R.R. Tolkien novel. “Hot Tub Time Machine” is set for release on March 26. Sony Corp. , which co-produced and distributed the two most recent Bond films, is interested in distributing future ones or becoming a production partner to MGM or its new owners once a sale is completed, Sony Pictures Entertainment Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Michael Lynton said this week. To contact the reporter on this story: Ronald Grover in Los Angeles at rgrover5@bloomberg.net

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Pansy Ho `Unsuitable’ Partner for MGM, New Jersey Gambling Regulators Say

March 17, 2010

By Beth Jinks March 18 (Bloomberg) — MGM Grand Macau co-owner Pansy Ho is an “unsuitable partner” for MGM Mirage because she was financially dependent on her father, casino magnate Stanley Ho , the New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement said. The New Jersey Casino Control Commission released a 74-page report as part of MGM’s settlement with the Division of Gaming Enforcement that will result in the company leaving Atlantic City rather than dropping its ties to Macau, the world’s largest gambling market. Pansy Ho and Stanley Ho didn’t respond to requests for comment made through their representatives. The gaming enforcement agency also found Stanley Ho an unsuitable partner. “Numerous governmental and regulatory agencies have referenced Stanley Ho’s associations with criminal enterprises, including permitting organized crime to operate and thrive within his casinos,” it said. The commission approved the planned sale of MGM Mirage’s stake in Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa in Atlantic City, while releasing the report detailing objections to the casino company’s partner in the former Portuguese colony, which is the only place in China where casinos are legal. “The DGE’s report acknowledges there is no evidence that Pansy Ho has engaged in any wrongdoing or been accused of any illegal activity,” MGM Mirage Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Jim Murren said in an e-mailed statement. Regulators elsewhere “have all either determined that the company’s relationship with Pansy Ho is appropriate or that further action is not necessary.” Stanley Funded The gambling enforcement division concluded “ MGM ’s due diligence/compliance efforts to be deficient” in Macau and said Stanley Ho accounted for 90 percent of the funds Pansy Ho used to fund the joint venture. The report included testimony by MGM Mirage executives, including former CEO Terry Lanni and former General Counsel Gary Jacobs, that Stanley Ho’s reputation made him unsuitable as a joint-venture partner. “The character and reputation of Stanley Ho, the father of MGM ’s joint-venture partner, precluded any finding other than that he is unsuitable,” the Division of Gaming Enforcement said. “MGM senior executives conceded his unsuitability during this investigation.” Lytton Ao, a spokesman for MGM Grand Macau, wasn’t immediately able to comment. MGM, based in Las Vegas, fell 4 cents to $12.26 at 4 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading . The stock has gained 34 percent this year. Stanley Ho’s SJM Holdings Ltd., the casino operator with the biggest market share in Macau, gained as much as 1.6 percent to HK$4.52 in morning trading in Hong Kong. The shares have advanced 4.9 percent this year. Assets in Trust Under the settlement, MGM Mirage will place its 50 percent stake in Borgata and nearby land holdings into a trust pending their sale. The company’s Atlantic City partner, Las Vegas-based Boyd Gaming Corp. , manages the casino and has the right to match any offer. The Division of Gaming Enforcement first raised its concerns in May. Stanley Ho amassed his fortune with a gambling monopoly in Macau that lasted 40 years, ending when the government granted gambling licenses to overseas companies including Las Vegas Sands Corp. and Wynn Resorts Ltd. MGM Mirage and Pansy Ho plan an initial public offering of their Macau casino business later this year. “ MGM Mirage structured its business relationship with Pansy Ho to ensure the highest standards of operation and compliance with all applicable gaming laws and to protect against any improper influence,” the company said. “We have had a very positive working relationship with Pansy Ho and have a spotless operating record at MGM Grand Macau.” Expanding Market Gross revenue at Macau’s casinos increased 10 percent to a record of more than 119 billion patacas ($14.9 billion) in 2009, government data show. Atlantic City gambling revenue tumbled a record 13 percent last year, the third straight annual decline, after nearby states allowed slot machines. Six of the 11 New Jersey casinos wound up in bankruptcy or are restructuring debt, and development has stalled. New Jersey’s budget yesterday projected the casinos may generate 12 percent less in tax revenue in the coming fiscal year. “That the best course of action for our company and its shareholders is to settle this matter and move forward with the compelling growth opportunities we have in Macau,” Murren said last week. Boyd will monitor the sale of MGM’s interest in Borgata, CEO Keith Smith said on a March 2 conference call. “We are pleased with our 50 percent ownership position,” Smith said. “It will continue to be business as usual at Borgata.” To contact the reporter on this story: Beth Jinks in New York at bjinks1@bloomberg.net

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Christie Calls `Non-Negotiable’ Plan to Let New Jersey Tax Increases Lapse

March 17, 2010

By Stacie Servetah and Terrence Dopp March 17 (Bloomberg) — New Jersey Governor Chris Christie said his plan not to renew a business-tax increase or an income- tax surcharge on residents earning $400,000 a year or more is “completely non-negotiable.” The $29.3 billion budget that Christie presented to lawmakers yesterday was “well-received” by the credit-rating companies, Treasurer Andrew Eristoff said. The plan closes a $10.7 billion deficit by suspending property-tax rebates, skipping the state’s $3 billion pension contribution and reducing aid to schools, towns and higher education. Christie, in an interview today at Bloomberg headquarters in New York, said he expects his proposal to ultimately pass the Democrat-controlled Legislature because lawmakers don’t “have a great number of alternatives.” The governor, a Republican who took office Jan. 19, said his decision to skip the contribution to New Jersey’s pension system, which will exacerbate a $46 billion funding hole, was “about making priority judgments.” “I don’t have the money,” Christie said. “It’s just that simple.” Christie’s plan for the fiscal year that begins July 1, which includes $28.3 billion in state spending and $1 billion in federal aid, is 9 percent lower than the current budget. In a 50-minute speech yesterday in Trenton, he said he’d veto any tax increase. ‘Millionaires’ Tax Lawmakers and former Governor Jon Corzine , the one-term Democrat who enacted the temporary boost in the state’s top income tax rate, could have extended it after it expired Dec. 31. The Democrats are raising the issue now for political purposes, Christie said. “If they wanted it so badly, they could have had it,” he said. The first-term governor must convince legislators to forgo both taxes as he seeks $820 million in cuts to public school aid and $445 million less for cities and towns. He asked lawmakers and voters to support a 2.5 percent cap on local property tax- increases to deter towns and schools from raising the levies to counteract the lost funding. The education-funding cut “does nothing to help local governments and schools get off the need to rely on property taxes,” Assembly Budget Committee Chairman Lou Greenwald , a Camden Democrat, said yesterday in a statement. School Budgets Christie’s aid reduction would amount to as much as 5 percent of district budgets. The governor said his proposed cap should apply to this year’s spending plans, even if lawmakers don’t pass it before school budgets are adopted in April. “They can always go back and make cuts,” he said. “I certainly don’t think we should just go back and throw up our hands.” Bret Schundler , Christie’s education commissioner, said yesterday that a state-law provision that allows school boards to boost property taxes when state aid is reduced will prompt many communities to propose raising local taxes this year. “I suspect what will occur in many districts this year is you will have budgets voted down as a function of large levies being included in the budget,” Schundler told reporters. Transit Fares Christie defended his decision in February to reduce the state subsidy for New Jersey Transit by $33 million, or 11 percent, to help close a $2.2 billion gap in the current state budget. The move led the transit agency to propose raising fares by a record 25 percent system-wide and reducing service to help close a $300 million budget deficit. “There’s no way to fix that without fare hikes,” he said. Christie said he supported raising transit fares over putting tolls on free roads in New Jersey including Interstates 78, 80, 195 and 295. The governor said he will sign legislation aimed at reducing the pension deficit by excluding part-time workers from the system, trimming benefits and forcing teachers to pay more for health care. Those bills passed the Senate in February and may be considered by the full Assembly as soon as next week, said Tom Hester, a spokesman for Assembly Democrats. New Jersey won’t issue pension bonds to fill the system’s deficit, Eristoff said. To contact the reporters on this story: Stacie Servetah in Trenton at sbabula@bloomberg.net Terrence Dopp in Trenton, New Jersey, at tdopp@bloomberg.net .

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Democrats Increase Pressure on Obama to Demand China Raise Yuan’s Value

March 15, 2010

By Mark Drajem March 16 (Bloomberg) — Democratic lawmakers, prodding President Barack Obama to take a tougher line on China’s currency, are drawing up legislation and convening hearings on the yuan’s effects on U.S. companies. Senators Sherrod Brown of Ohio and Debbie Stabenow of Michigan will propose legislation offering criteria to find a country has a misaligned currency, and setting consequences, according to a draft of the proposal. The House Ways and Means Committee has scheduled a March 24 hearing on China’s currency. The moves reflect increasing pressure on the Obama administration to demand that China raise the value of the yuan, said Scott Paul, executive director of the Alliance for American Manufacturing. A weak yuan hurts U.S. manufacturers by providing Chinese competitors with an unfair advantage, he said. “We’re in a wretched stretch in the economy,” Paul, whose Washington-based organization represents U.S. Steel Corp. and the United Steelworkers union, said in an interview. “There is an increasing anxiety about jobs, the economy and the role of China in the economy.” Meghan Dubyak, a spokeswoman for Brown, said a press conference to announce the legislation is scheduled for 12:30 p.m. today in Washington. Matt Williams, a spokesman for Stabenow, confirmed the plans. The Ways and Means Committee announced its hearing in an e-mailed statement yesterday. The yuan rose 21 percent against the dollar from July 2005 to July 2008, before the government halted its advance to protect exporters. Paul Krugman , a Nobel-prize winning economist at Princeton University in New Jersey, said last week that global economic growth would be about 1.5 percentage points higher if China stopped restraining its currency’s value. Calls Rebuffed The value of the yuan, or renminbi, has contributed to souring economic relations with China, the second-biggest U.S. trading partner after Canada. Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has rebuffed calls for the yuan to appreciate, saying at a press conference in Beijing on March 14 that he doesn’t “think the renminbi is undervalued.” “We oppose countries pointing fingers at each other and even forcing a country to appreciate its currency,” Wen said. Yesterday, U.S. lawmakers urged Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner to find that China manipulates its currency. Representatives Timothy Ryan of Ohio and Mike Michaud of Maine, both Democrats, sent a letter signed by 130 lawmakers to Geithner demanding the Obama administration take actions including higher tariffs on Chinese-made imports. ‘Hold Back’ Recovery “If the administration fails to act on this issue it will hold back our economic recovery and hurt the ability of American small businesses and manufacturers to increase their production,” Michaud said in a statement. The draft legislation, similar to a measure considered in the Senate in 2007, would require the Treasury Department to determine if any nation has a currency misaligned with the dollar. The current law requires a finding of currency manipulation, which the Treasury declined to make in April even as it said the yuan was undervalued. The measure wouldn’t single out China by name. If the Treasury made a misalignment determination for a country such as China, the U.S. would be forced to take actions at the International Monetary Fund and, after 60 days, would have to bar federal procurement from that country. After 360 days of inaction, the U.S. Trade Representative’s office would have to bring a complaint at the World Trade Organization over that nation’s currency, the draft says. To contact the reporter on this story: Mark Drajem in Washington at mdrajem@bloomberg.net .

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Democrats Increase Pressure on Obama to Demand China Raise Yuan’s Value

March 15, 2010

By Mark Drajem March 16 (Bloomberg) — Democratic lawmakers, prodding President Barack Obama to take a tougher line on China’s currency, are drawing up legislation and convening hearings on the yuan’s effects on U.S. companies. Senators Sherrod Brown of Ohio and Debbie Stabenow of Michigan will propose legislation offering criteria to find a country has a misaligned currency, and setting consequences, according to a draft of the proposal. The House Ways and Means Committee has scheduled a March 24 hearing on China’s currency. The moves reflect increasing pressure on the Obama administration to demand that China raise the value of the yuan, said Scott Paul, executive director of the Alliance for American Manufacturing. A weak yuan hurts U.S. manufacturers by providing Chinese competitors with an unfair advantage, he said. “We’re in a wretched stretch in the economy,” Paul, whose Washington-based organization represents U.S. Steel Corp. and the United Steelworkers union, said in an interview. “There is an increasing anxiety about jobs, the economy and the role of China in the economy.” Meghan Dubyak, a spokeswoman for Brown, said a press conference to announce the legislation is scheduled for 12:30 p.m. today in Washington. Matt Williams, a spokesman for Stabenow, confirmed the plans. The Ways and Means Committee announced its hearing in an e-mailed statement yesterday. The yuan rose 21 percent against the dollar from July 2005 to July 2008, before the government halted its advance to protect exporters. Paul Krugman , a Nobel-prize winning economist at Princeton University in New Jersey, said last week that global economic growth would be about 1.5 percentage points higher if China stopped restraining its currency’s value. Calls Rebuffed The value of the yuan, or renminbi, has contributed to souring economic relations with China, the second-biggest U.S. trading partner after Canada. Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has rebuffed calls for the yuan to appreciate, saying at a press conference in Beijing on March 14 that he doesn’t “think the renminbi is undervalued.” “We oppose countries pointing fingers at each other and even forcing a country to appreciate its currency,” Wen said. Yesterday, U.S. lawmakers urged Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner to find that China manipulates its currency. Representatives Timothy Ryan of Ohio and Mike Michaud of Maine, both Democrats, sent a letter signed by 130 lawmakers to Geithner demanding the Obama administration take actions including higher tariffs on Chinese-made imports. ‘Hold Back’ Recovery “If the administration fails to act on this issue it will hold back our economic recovery and hurt the ability of American small businesses and manufacturers to increase their production,” Michaud said in a statement. The draft legislation, similar to a measure considered in the Senate in 2007, would require the Treasury Department to determine if any nation has a currency misaligned with the dollar. The current law requires a finding of currency manipulation, which the Treasury declined to make in April even as it said the yuan was undervalued. The measure wouldn’t single out China by name. If the Treasury made a misalignment determination for a country such as China, the U.S. would be forced to take actions at the International Monetary Fund and, after 60 days, would have to bar federal procurement from that country. After 360 days of inaction, the U.S. Trade Representative’s office would have to bring a complaint at the World Trade Organization over that nation’s currency, the draft says. To contact the reporter on this story: Mark Drajem in Washington at mdrajem@bloomberg.net .

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Goldman Sachs Squeezes Hedge Funds in $110 Billion `Collateral Arbitrage’

March 15, 2010

By Michael J. Moore and Christine Harper March 15 (Bloomberg) — Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. , two of the biggest traders of over-the- counter derivatives, are exploiting their growing clout in that market to secure cheap funding in addition to billions in revenue from the business. Both New York-based banks are demanding unequal arrangements with hedge-fund firms, forcing them to post more cash collateral to offset risks on trades while putting up less on their own wagers. At the end of December this imbalance furnished Goldman Sachs with $110 billion, according to a filing. That’s money it can reinvest in higher-yielding assets. “If you’re seen as a major player and you have a product that people can’t get elsewhere, you have the negotiating power,” said Richard Lindsey , a former director of market regulation at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission who ran the prime brokerage unit at Bear Stearns Cos. from 1999 to 2006. “Goldman and a handful of other banks are the places where people can get over-the-counter products today.” The collapse of American International Group Inc. in 2008 was hastened by the insurer’s inability to meet $20 billion in collateral demands after its credit-default swaps lost value and its credit rating was lowered, Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner , president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York at the time of the bailout, testified on Jan. 27. Goldman Sachs was among AIG’s biggest counterparties. Goldman Sachs Chief Financial Officer David Viniar has said that his firm’s stringent collateral agreements would have helped protect the firm against a default by AIG. Instead, a $182.3 billion taxpayer bailout of AIG ensured that Goldman Sachs and others were repaid in full. Extracting Collateral Over the last three years, Goldman Sachs has extracted more collateral from counterparties in the $605 trillion over-the- counter derivatives markets, according to filings with the SEC. The firm led by Chief Executive Officer Lloyd C. Blankfein collected cash collateral that represented 57 percent of outstanding over-the-counter derivatives assets as of December 2009, while it posted just 16 percent on liabilities, the firm said in a filing this month. That gap has widened from rates of 45 percent versus 18 percent in 2008 and 32 percent versus 19 percent in 2007, company filings show. “That’s classic collateral arbitrage,” said Brad Hintz , an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. in New York who previously worked as treasurer at Morgan Stanley and chief financial officer at Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. “You always want to enter into something where you’re getting more collateral in than what you’re putting out.” Using the Cash The banks get to use the cash collateral, said Robert Claassen , a Palo Alto, California-based partner in the corporate and capital markets practice at law firm Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker LLP. “They do have to pay interest on it, usually at the Fed funds rate, but that’s a low rate,” Claassen said. Goldman Sachs’s $110 billion net collateral balance in December was almost three times the amount it had attracted from depositors at its regulated bank subsidiaries. The collateral could earn the bank an annual return of $439 million, assuming it’s financed at the current Fed funds effective rate of 0.15 percent and that half is reinvested at the same rate and half in two-year Treasury notes yielding 0.948 percent. “We manage our collateral arrangements as part of our overall risk-management discipline and not as a driver of profits,” said Michael DuVally , a spokesman for Goldman Sachs. He said that Bloomberg’s estimates of the firm’s potential returns on collateral were “flawed” and declined to provide further explanation. JPMorgan, Citigroup JPMorgan received cash collateral equal to 57 percent of the fair value of its derivatives receivables after accounting for offsetting positions, according to data contained in the firm’s most recent annual filing. It posted collateral equal to 45 percent of the comparable payables, leaving it with a $37 billion net cash collateral balance, the filing shows. In 2008 the cash collateral received by JPMorgan made up 47 percent of derivative assets, while the amount posted was 37 percent of liabilities. The percentages were 47 percent and 26 percent in 2007, according to data in company filings. By contrast, New York-based Citigroup Inc. , a bank that’s 27 percent owned by the U.S. government, paid out $11 billion more in collateral on over-the-counter derivatives than it collected at the end of 2009, a company filing shows. Brian Marchiony , a spokesman for JPMorgan, and Alexander Samuelson , a spokesman for Citigroup, both declined to comment. Derivatives Market The five biggest U.S. commercial banks in the derivatives market — Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo & Co. — account for 97 percent of the notional value of derivatives held in the banking industry, according to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. In credit-default swaps, the world’s five biggest dealers are JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Frankfurt-based Deutsche Bank AG and London-based Barclays Plc, according to a report by Deutsche Bank Research that cited the European Central Bank and filings with the SEC. Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan had combined revenue of $29.1 billion from trading derivatives and cash securities in the first nine months of 2009, according to Federal Reserve reports. The U.S. Congress is considering bills that would require more derivatives deals be processed through clearinghouses, privately owned third parties that guarantee transactions and keep track of collateral and margin. A clearinghouse that includes both banks and hedge funds would erode the banks’ collateral balances, said Kevin McPartland , a senior analyst at research firm Tabb Group in New York. ‘Level Playing Field’ When contracts are negotiated between two parties, collateral arrangements are determined by the relative credit ratings of the two companies and other factors in the relationship, such as how much trading a fund does with a bank, McPartland said. When trades are cleared, the requirements have “nothing to do with credit so much as the mark-to-market value of your current net position.” “Once you’re able to use a clearinghouse, presumably everyone’s on a level playing field,” he said. Still, banks may maintain their advantage in parts of the market that aren’t standardized or liquid enough for clearing, McPartland said. JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon and Goldman Sachs’s Blankfein both told the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission in January that they support central clearing for all standardized over-the-counter derivatives. “The percentage of products that are suitable for central clearing is relatively small in comparison to the entire OTC derivatives market,” McPartland said. Bilateral Agreements A report this month by the New York-based International Swaps & Derivatives Association found that 84 percent of collateral agreements are bilateral, meaning collateral is exchanged in two directions. Banks have an advantage in dealing with asset managers because they can require collateral when initiating a trade, sometimes amounting to as much as 20 percent of the notional value, said Craig Stein , a partner at law firm Schulte Roth & Zabel LLP in New York who represents hedge-fund clients. JPMorgan’s filing shows that these initiation amounts provided the firm with about $11 billion of its $37.4 billion net collateral balance at the end of December, down from about $22 billion a year earlier and $17 billion at the end of 2007. Goldman Sachs doesn’t break out that category. A bank’s net collateral balance doesn’t get included in its capital calculations and has to be held in liquid products because it can change quickly, according to an executive at one of the biggest U.S. banks who declined to be identified because he wasn’t authorized to speak publicly. Counterparty Demands Counterparties demanding collateral helped speed the collapse of Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers, according to a New York Fed report published in January. Those that had posted collateral with Lehman were often in the same position as unsecured creditors when they tried to recover funds from the bankrupt firm, the report said. “When the collateral is posted to a derivatives dealer like Goldman or any of the others, those funds are not segregated, which means that the dealer bank gets to use them to finance itself,” said Darrell Duffie , a professor of finance at Stanford University in Palo Alto. “That’s all fine until a crisis comes along and counterparties pull back and the money that dealer banks thought they had disappears.” ‘Greater Push Back’ While some hedge-fund firms have pushed for banks to put up more cash after the collapse of Lehman Brothers, Goldman Sachs and other survivors of the credit crisis have benefited from the drop in competition. “When the crisis started developing, I definitely thought it was going to be an opportunity for our fund clients to make some headway in negotiating, and actually the exact opposite has happened,” said Schulte Roth’s Stein. “Post-financial crisis, I’ve definitely seen a greater push back on their side.” Hedge-fund firms that don’t have the negotiating power to strike two-way collateral agreements with banks have more to gain from a clearinghouse than those that do, said Stein. Regulators should encourage banks to post more collateral to their counterparties to lower the impact of a single bank’s failure, according to the January New York Fed report. Pressure from regulators and a move to greater use of clearinghouses may mean the banks’ advantage has peaked. “Before the financial crisis, collateral was very unevenly demanded and somewhat insufficiently demanded,” Stanford’s Duffie said. A clearinghouse “should reduce the asymmetry and raise the total amount of collateral.” To contact the reporters on this story: Michael J. Moore in New York at mmoore55@bloomberg.net ; Christine Harper in New York at charper@bloomberg.net .

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Lehman Bankruptcy Report Points Way to Plaintiffs, Not Prison, Lawyers Say

March 13, 2010

By Patricia Hurtado and Linda Sandler March 13 (Bloomberg) — A 2,200-page bankruptcy report a year in the making may point the way for plaintiffs looking to sue former Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. officials, lawyers said, rather than grand juries probing possible crimes. The report, filed by bankruptcy examiner Anton Valukas in Manhattan federal court on March 11, describes off-balance-sheet transactions Lehman used to hide debt in late 2007 and 2008, deceiving shareholders about its ability to withstand losses. The firm, which collapsed in September 2008, filed the biggest bankruptcy in U.S. history and helped trigger the financial crisis and resulting $700 billion government bailout. Within a month of its demise, three federal criminal probes began and at least 12 subpoenas were issued by prosecutors in New York and New Jersey, lead Lehman bankruptcy lawyer Harvey Miller said at the time. Since then, no major criminal cases have been brought over the bank’s failure. The new report is unlikely to change that, said attorney Jacob Frenkel . “There is language here that would validate there being no federal criminal case brought,” said Frenkel, a former Securities and Exchange Commission lawyer, of the Lehman report. “There would have been language of ‘intent’ or deliberately ignoring information.” Attorney Thomas Gorman , chairman of Porter, Wright, Morris & Arthur LLP’s securities litigation practice and co-chair of the American Bar Association’s White Collar Crime Securities Section, said that the report may nevertheless serve as a road map for prosecutors. “It raises some very significant and troubling allegations about financial manipulation and fraud of the company’s books and records,” Gorman said. ‘Grossly Negligent’ Fuld, 63, was “at least grossly negligent in causing Lehman to file misleading periodic reports” while its risks were rising because of long-term assets financed with short-term debt, Valukas wrote in the report. Lehman’s executives engaged in conduct ranging from “non- culpable errors of business judgment” to “actionable balance sheet manipulation,” as they used “accounting gimmicks” to move assets off the balance sheet without disclosing that to the government, rating-agencies, investors or Lehman’s board, the report said. “The language that he used, by not including phraseology to suggest there was criminal conduct, almost by definition means they’ve found none,” said Frenkel, now in private practice at Shulman, Rogers, Gandal, Pordy & Ecker PA in Potomac, Maryland. “The strongest phrase he used to describe the conduct was ‘gross negligence.’ That cannot satisfy a criminal standard.” Didn’t Structure, Negotiate Fuld’s lawyer, Patricia Hynes of Allen & Overy LP in New York, said in a statement that her client didn’t structure or negotiate the repurchase agreements Valukas said were behind the manipulation. Fuld wasn’t aware of their accounting treatment, Hynes said. The evidence available to the examiner shows the “transactions were done in accordance with an internal accounting policy, supported by legal opinions and approved by Ernst & Young,” she said. The accounting firm never raised any concerns about the transactions with Fuld, Hynes said, “who throughout his career faithfully and diligently worked in the interests of Lehman.” Robert Nardoza , a spokesman for Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Benton Campbell , and Janice Oh , a spokeswoman for Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara, declined comment. U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman in New Jersey didn’t immediately return a call seeking comment. Last Audit “Our last audit of the company was for the fiscal year ending Nov. 30, 2007,” said Charlie Perkins , a spokesman for Ernst & Young LLP, in an e-mailed statement. “Our opinion indicated that Lehman’s financial statements for that year were fairly presented in accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), and we remain of that view.” Gorman said that, while chief executives can argue they weren’t directly involved in every transaction by the companies they direct, it isn’t unusual for them to be sued. “He’s the CEO of the company,” Gorman said of Fuld. “He’s responsible for the overall financial statements. When you look at a specific transaction again, you will have to look at it in context, if it is so large and so significant he has to be aware of it as CEO, you’d expect him to at least know of it.” Maurice “Hank” Greenberg , the former CEO of American International Group Inc., was accused in a 2005 lawsuit filed by the New York Attorney General of allegedly using sham transactions to hide losses and inflate reserves at the company. Eliot Spitzer Then-New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer alleged Greenberg “orchestrated a massive accounting fraud at AIG” and that he was “at the center of the fraudulent transaction” involving New York-based AIG and General Re Corp., the reinsurer owned by Warren Buffett ’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. Greenberg, who ran AIG for 38 years until he was forced to retire, has denied wrongdoing and asked that the case be dismissed. He said in court papers that he relied on professional advisers for transactions that are the basis of claims in the state’s lawsuit. His lawyers argued there isn’t any evidence that he sought improper transactions or knew they were improper. Frenkel noted that the language of the examiner’s report doesn’t mention intentional or deliberate actions by Lehman officials. He cited the acquittal in Brooklyn, New York, federal court in November of two former Bear Stearns Cos. hedge fund managers, Ralph Cioffi and Matthew Tannin , on charges that they misled investors about the health of their funds. ‘Deliberative Process’ Valukas “talked in terms of the deliberative process, bad business judgment,” Frenkel said. “The best example of that in the federal criminal arena is Cioffi and Tannin in the Bear Stearns case. The jury in the Eastern District of New York was astute enough to recognize that bad business judgment does not constitute criminality and acquitted them.” Daniel Richman , a former federal prosecutor in Manhattan, and currently a law professor at Columbia Law School, said regulators and prosecutors will look further into Lehman’s use of accounting devices. “Fuld, Lehman personnel and the accounting and law firms named in the report might well have very different versions of these facts,” Richman said. “What are portrayed as inappropriate accounting moves will doubtless be described by those named in the report as perhaps overly aggressive, definitely regrettable but not criminal.” ‘Blame Others’ Richman said the report may at the very least spur former Lehman officials to go to the SEC and prosecutors, “to set the record straight and perhaps blame others.” Frenkel said there’s no language in Valukas’s report to suggest “criminal culpability.” Civil liability, he said, is another matter. “I’m sure the plaintiff’s bar was out celebrating last night with this report,” Frenkel said. The case is In re Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., 08-13555, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan). To contact the reporters on this story: Patricia Hurtado in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York in Brooklyn at pathurtado@bloomberg.net and; Linda Sandler in New York at lsandler@bloomberg.net ;

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AIG Said to Query Bonus Holdouts in Push for $45 Million of Concessions

March 12, 2010

By Hugh Son March 12 (Bloomberg) — American International Group Inc. ’s effort to reach its commitment of $45 million in bonus concessions are focusing on former employees who have refused to accept reduced payouts, said people with knowledge of the talks. The insurer mailed questionnaires this month to ex-workers at the Financial Products unit asking whether they’d earned income after leaving AIG, said the people, who declined to be identified because the negotiations are private. Under the program, compensation earned by former AIG staff in 2009 from another employer would lower payouts to be delivered next week from the New York-based company, the people said. AIG is seeking to satisfy U.S. paymaster Kenneth Feinberg ’s demands that derivatives staff return the full amount they pledged to give back after a March 2009 backlash against the awards. The employees, who worked in the unit blamed for losses that pushed AIG to the brink of collapse in September 2008, agreed to about $39 million in cuts as of Jan. 29. The bailed- out insurer said the awards were necessary to retain staff critical to unwinding trades. “AIG owes the taxpayer a huge amount of money and we want to make sure that my compensation practices take into account the need for AIG to thrive,” Feinberg, the Obama administration special master on executive pay, said in a Dec. 11 interview with Bloomberg Television. More than 95 percent of about 200 current Financial Products workers agreed to bonus cuts of 10 percent, one of the people said. Most of about 60 former workers refused to make concessions and responded that they didn’t earn income after leaving AIG, the person said. ‘Remains Committed’ The former employees, who were asked to take a 20 percent reduction, are due to receive bonuses by March 15 under the retention agreement, the person said. If AIG doesn’t reach its goal, it may be prohibited from raising salaries of top-earning employees under Feinberg’s jurisdiction, Treasury has indicated to the insurer. AIG “remains committed to reaching the target and we’re confident we will,” said Mark Herr , a spokesman for the insurer, in a statement. The firm said last month that it was overhauling its incentive system to reward employees for performance. The backlash against AIG compensation peaked a year ago with President Barack Obama criticizing the awards. To contact the reporters on this story: Hugh Son in New York at hson1@bloomberg.net ;

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Tullett Prebon Says It’s Discussing Possible Sale of Company; Shares Jump

March 10, 2010

By Gavin Finch March 10 (Bloomberg) — Tullett Prebon Plc , the British inter-dealer broker led by Terry Smith , said it’s in talks about a possible sale of the company. Tullett is in “preliminary discussions” with a third- party it didn’t identify, the London-based firm said in a statement today. Tullett and New York-based GFI Group Inc., the largest inter-dealer broker of credit derivatives trades, ended merger negotiations in 2008. “We believe the most likely buyer to be an exchange which could share information technology costs and where Tullett would provide a complementary product set,” Numis Securities Ltd. analyst James Hamilton wrote in a note to clients today. “The conflict and competitive nature of banking means it is less likely to be a bank,” he said. “Competition or size would prevent any inter-dealer broker from acquiring Tullett.” The stock jumped 19 percent to 367.7 pence as of 11:14 a.m. in London trading, valuing the company at about 792 million pounds ($1.2 billion). Before today, the stock had lost 25 percent over the past six months as Tullett brokers quit to join competitors and revenue from its equities division dropped. “Tullett Prebon won’t want to sell at its current valuation,” said Vivek Raja , an analyst at Panmure Gordon & Co. in London. “It isn’t an accurate reflection of the value of the business.” Australia’s Macquarie Group Ltd. and Bank of China Ltd. are considering offers, the Daily Mail reported earlier today, without saying where it got the information. Nigel Szembel , a spokesman for the broker, declined to comment. Karen Smith , a spokeswoman for Macquarie, also declined to comment. GFI Group Inc.’s Sachvir Cheema didn’t immediately return calls. Deutsche Boerse Deutsche Boerse AG , owner of the Frankfurt stock exchange, is part-owner of Eurex AG, Europe’s largest derivatives market. NYSE Euronext owns the London-based Liffe futures exchange while London Stock Exchange Group Plc owns the EDX London Ltd. market. Nasdaq OMX Group Inc. says it operates the fourth-largest European derivatives exchange. Inter-dealer brokers such as Tullett act as a go-between for banks that trade bonds, stocks, currencies, energy and derivatives. They typically handle more trades between banks during periods of greater market volatility. Tullett, which split off from U.K. stockbroker Collins Stewart in 2006, competes against ICAP Plc , the biggest broker of transactions among banks. ICAP jumped as much as 5.5 percent to 369.5 pence in London trading. Smith’s Stake Smith, 56, has been CEO of Tullett Prebon since setting it up, and holds a 4 percent stake worth about 31.7 million pounds, making him the largest individual shareholder . The son of an East London bus driver, Smith studied history at University College, Cardiff and considered teaching before heading to London’s financial district. He was a bank analyst in London from 1984 to 1989, then joined UBS AG in 1990 as head of research. He was fired after publishing a book called “Accounting for Growth” that questioned the accounting practices of some of UBS’s clients. Tullett said on March 8 that full-year net income climbed 17 percent to 110.8 million pounds as fixed-income trading revenue increased. To contact the reporters on this story: Gavin Finch in London at gfinch@bloomberg.net

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Pakistan Suicide Car Bomber Kills 12, Wounds 70 at Lahore Police Building

March 8, 2010

By Khalid Qayum and Anwar Shakir March 8 (Bloomberg) — A suicide car bombing outside a Pakistan police building in Lahore killed 12 people, the first attack this year on major northern cities struck repeatedly by Taliban militants in late 2009. The bomber smashed his car into the outer gate of the two- story intelligence building, causing it to collapse and leaving a 20-foot (six meter) deep crater, Khusro Pervez, the city’s police commissioner said. At least 70 people were injured with some still trapped under rubble, Akhtar Ali, a spokesman for the Edhi Ambulance Service , said by telephone. After Pakistan’s military launched its biggest offensive against Taliban guerrillas in October, the capital Islamabad, nearby army town of Rawalpindi, Peshawar and Lahore were struck by bombers and gunmen leaving hundreds dead. Since December, violence has been concentrated in smaller, more remote towns in the northwest. In a major setback for the Taliban, Pakistan says their leader, Hakimullah Mehsud , was killed by a missile fired from a U.S. drone aircraft in January. Fresh “hits in the main cities may be a reaction” to the army’s progress in fighting the militants, said Fateh Muhammad Burfat , an analyst at Karachi University. Interior Minister Rehman Malik said today the five-month offensive against the Taliban in their northwestern strongholds near the Afghan border had “broken the back” of the insurgency. Lahore last year suffered several major bombings and gun attacks, including one on the Sri Lankan cricket team in March. Police buildings in the city were raided on Oct. 15, and twin bombings at its busiest market on Dec. 7 killed 40 people, including many women and children. ‘Substantial Blow’ This year, only Karachi among Pakistan’s major cities had been hit by a bombing, with 31 killed at a religious procession in the port city on Feb. 5. The army said in February its campaign had dealt a substantial blow to the militants’ ability to carry out nationwide terrorist strikes. Some of the attacks in the northwest have claimed large numbers of victims, with 105 people killed when a suicide bomber struck a volleyball tournament in the town of Lakki Marwat. As troops pursue their campaign, Pakistani security forces have detained at least four senior members of the Afghan Taliban, including deputy leader Abdul Ghani Baradar . Talat Masood , a political consultant and retired Pakistani army lieutenant general, said it’s too early to judge how “complete or permanent” the shift against Afghan militant groups that Pakistan has long backed may become. Adam Gadahn, a U.S.-born spokesman for al-Qaeda, was yesterday reported by Associated Press to have been arrested in Karachi. The U.S. hasn’t confirmed the detention. To contact the reporters on this story: Khalid Qayum in Islamabad at kqayum@bloomberg.net ; Anwar Shakir in Peshawar at Ashakir1@bloomberg.net .

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Sequent Energy President Doug Schantz Missing in New Orleans, Company Says

March 7, 2010

By Samantha Zee March 7 (Bloomberg) — Douglas Schantz , president of AGL Resources Inc. ’s Sequent Energy Management, has been missing since the early morning of March 5 in New Orleans, the company said. Schantz, 54, was last seen on the city’s Bourbon Street after being out with a group of fellow employees. The group had traveled to New Orleans to make a donation to Tulane University’s energy graduate program. “Doug was due back Friday morning and hasn’t been seen since 2 a.m. Friday when he was out with a group of co- workers,” said Alan Chapple , a spokesman for AGL and Sequent, in a telephone interview. “We are working with all law enforcement officials,” he said. “We are doing everything we can to locate Doug and bring him back safely.” The New Orleans Police Department didn’t immediately return a telephone call seeking comment. Schantz was scheduled to attend a staff meeting at his office at noon on March 5 and co-workers became concerned after he failed to attend. Schantz has been president of Sequent, AGL’s asset manager serving natural gas wholesale customers, since 2003, Chapple said. Atlanta-based AGL is an energy-services company with about 2.3 million customers in six states, mostly in the southeast U.S. In addition to Sequent, it operates natural gas storage facilities and sells natural gas in Georgia under the Georgia Natural Gas brand. Schantz’s disappearance was earlier reported by the Houston Chronicle. To contact the reporter on this story: Samantha Zee in San Francisco at szee@bloomberg.net

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Tiger Woods Mea Culpa Failed to Improve His Public Standing, Study Shows

March 4, 2010

By John Helyar March 4 (Bloomberg) — Tiger Woods ’s televised apology for infidelity on Feb. 19 failed to reverse his plummeting stature with the American public, according to a survey by a unit of Omnicom Group Inc. Davie Brown Entertainment found that the 34-year-old golfer’s appeal as a corporate spokesman reached a new low after national polling in the week ended March 2. Once ranked sixth as a celebrity endorser by the firm’s Davie Brown Index , he now ranks 147th. The index is used by advertising agencies to gauge the ability of celebrities to influence consumers. Eight surveys conducted since Woods’s Nov. 27 auto accident, which led to revelations of extramarital affairs, have chronicled a steady decline in Woods’s stature. “Companies have to decide whether the damage will spill over to their brands,” said Rick Burton, the David Falk professor of sports management at Syracuse University in Syracuse, New York. “Some of the decision is driven by research, some of it reflects chief executives’ values.” On Feb. 26, Davie Brown client Gatorade, a unit of Purchase, New York-based soft-drink maker PepsiCo Inc. , became the latest company to drop Woods as an endorser. Jennifer Schmit, a spokeswoman for Gatorade, wouldn’t discuss the reasons for the decision. ‘Outpouring of Support’ Glenn Greenspan , a spokesman for Woods, said that Woods’s apology has helped. “It is becoming clear that the public listened to Tiger with an open mind and we have had an outpouring of support in letters, calls and e-mails to our office,” Greenspan said in an e-mail. Greenspan cited a Feb. 19 HCD Research survey of 1,090 people who watched Woods on TV, of whom 31 percent came away with a more positive perception of him, 17 percent a more negative perception, and 52 percent were unchanged. Survey results are posted on the Web site of HCD’s MediaCurves.com . “He spoke genuinely and from the heart, but as he pointed out, people should make up their own minds based on his sincerity and his actions,” Greenspan said. Matt Delzell, a Davie Brown group account director, said Woods’s inability to turn around his public standing in the firm’s index was best measured by one of its eight components: trust. Ozzy Osbourne Levels Woods once ranked 117th among the firm’s celebrity universe of approximately 2,500, putting him in the company of singer Reba McEntire and comedian Robin Williams . In the latest survey, Woods ranks No. 2,378, in the company of rapper Lil’ Kim and rock star Ozzy Osbourne . “He appeared to be a great family man with a perfect life,” Delzell said. “When you shatter that, it’s hard to regain. Anybody can come out and make a statement. People are going to want to see about his actions.” Woods’s overall DBI score would have been lower, according to Delzell, if not for his high recognition rate — 99 percent of the latest survey’s respondents were aware of him. That figures heavily into the DBI. Woods’s “attribute average,” combining measures of such characteristics as appeal, influence and trust, has declined from a score of 74.32 before the accident to 52.2 in the latest survey. The score blipped up to 53.28 from 51.77 in a survey completed Feb. 8, but resumed its decline after the TV appearance. Nike Inc. , which produces a line of Tiger Woods golf gear and apparel, has stood by him and will continue to do so, said Beth Gast , a spokesman for the Beaverton, Oregon-based company. “Our position remains unchanged,” she said in an e-mail. Burton, the Syracuse professor, said Woods can only reverse his DBI numbers and other public-approval ratings by getting back into competition and playing at a high level. “He’ll have to win a tournament, and then win over and over again,” he said. To contact the reporter on this story: John Helyar in Atlanta at jhelyar@bloomberg.net

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American Funds Ranked First by Morningstar for Wealth Creation, Janus Last

March 2, 2010

By Christopher Condon March 1 (Bloomberg) — American Funds, the biggest active manager of stock and bond mutual funds, created the most wealth for investors in the past decade, while Janus Capital Group Inc . destroyed the most, Morningstar Inc. said today. American, owned by Los Angeles-based Capital Group Cos., added $191 billion in net wealth for clients from 2000 through 2009, according to a Morningstar study of the 50 largest U.S. asset managers. Denver’s Janus wiped out $58.4 billion, the Chicago-based research firm said. Morningstar calculated the figures by subtracting a firm’s fund inflows of the last decade and its total assets at the end of 1999 from a comparable figure for last year. The method puts a dollar figure on the total return percentage traditionally used to measure fund family performance. Firms with more assets are more likely to end up at the top or bottom of the rankings. “It helps to be big, but you also have to deliver in terms of performance to come out on top,” Sonya Morris , Morningstar’s editorial director, said in an interview. American Funds was followed by Vanguard Group Inc. of Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, which created $189 billion in wealth. Vanguard, with $1.07 trillion mostly in index funds, and American Funds, with $914 billion, were the two largest managers of stock and bond mutual funds as of Dec. 31. Putnam Investments LLC, the Boston-based firm whose funds lost $46.4 billion of investor money, was ranked second to Janus in terms of wealth destruction. Stock Bubble James Aber , a Janus spokesman, said the study reflects the end of the technology stock bubble in 2001 and 2002. He said the company has since beefed up its research team and improved its investment processes. More than half of Janus’s funds had four or five of a possible five stars from Morningstar as of Dec. 31, he said. Jon Goldstein , a spokesman for Putnam, said the company had made “significant steps to bolster its investment organization” under new ownership and leadership. Putnam was acquired in 2007 by Montreal-based Power Financial Corp. Robert Reynolds became chief executive officer the following year. Among fund categories, intermediate bond funds created the most wealth at $192.6 billion. Funds that target large companies with above-average earnings growth expectations did worst, destroying $107.6 billion. Morris said some of the best performing companies and fund categories recently have been among the most unpopular. American Funds had an estimated $25.5 billion in net outflows in 2009, according to Morningstar, more than any other firm. Moderate-allocation funds, which typically invest 50 percent to 70 percent of their assets in stocks and the rest in bonds, were the third-best wealth creators for the decade and had $17.6 billion in investor withdrawals last year. To contact the reporter on this story: Christopher Condon in Boston at ccondon4@bloomberg.net

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Gap Contacted by Antitrust Regulator on Simon Property’s Prime Outlet Deal

February 28, 2010

By Matthew Townsend, Prashant Gopal and Daniel Taub Feb. 27 (Bloomberg) — Gap Inc. was contacted by the Federal Trade Commission about Simon Property Group Inc. ’s proposed acquisition of Prime Outlets Acquisition Co. “We are aware of the FTC’s inquiry into the proposed Simon acquisition of Prime Outlets and we are responding to its inquiries,” Louise Callagy , a spokeswoman for the San Francisco-based clothing retailer, said in a telephone interview yesterday. Gap has stores at outlets owned by both Simon and Prime. Simon agreed in December to buy Prime Outlets from Lightstone Group for $2.33 billion including debt. The deal would the largest U.S. mall owner an additional 22 retail outlet centers, increasing its total to more than 60. Simon also is trying to buy bankrupt General Growth Properties Inc., its biggest rival. General Growth rejected Simon’s unsolicited bid Feb. 16, saying the $10 billion offer was too low. Simon’s bid to buy General Growth out of Chapter 11 bankruptcy may also face regulatory hurdles, David Fick , an analyst with Stifel Nicolaus & Co. in Baltimore, said in a telephone interview. “If there are issues with tenants on the smaller deal, there’s potentially a bigger issue with tenants on a bigger deal,” Fick said. Simon Property Chairman and Chief Executive Officer David Simon and Les Morris , a Simon spokesman, didn’t respond to telephone calls seeking comment. Cecelia Prewett, an FTC spokeswoman, also didn’t respond to messages. Before Formal Investigation David Keating , a spokesman for Chicago-based General Growth, declined to comment. Robert Pitofsky , a law professor at Georgetown University and a former chairman of the Federal Trade Commission, said the agency often calls competitors and other relevant parties before deciding whether to launch a formal investigation. “This is a very common approach to horizontal or vertical mergers,” he said. “You have to know a lot more about the facts before you fire off some kind of formal investigation.” General Growth this week announced an agreement to split itself into two companies as part of an effort to exit bankruptcy with a $2.63 billion investment from Brookfield Asset Management Inc. Other bids may still be made, General Growth President Thomas H. Nolan Jr . said on Feb. 24. Simon subsequently signed a confidentiality agreement allowing it to review General Growth’s finances as it considers the potential acquisition, according to a person familiar with the pact. ‘Once-Over’ “The bare facts that are known today suggest that the transaction will at least get a once-over, either by the Department of Justice or the FTC, simply because you’re combining No. 1 with No. 2,” said Brian Weinberger, an antitrust attorney with Buchalter Nemer in Scottsdale, Arizona. “If nothing else, the competitors of Simon and General Growth will look at those issues and consider whether to object,” he said. David Simon has dismissed concerns about the FTC blocking a purchase of General Growth. Simon isn’t at risk of having too large a market share or a monopoly in any market, he said in a Feb. 5 conference call with analysts and investors. “We certainly would argue strenuously that neither of those occur with or without GGP or anybody else,” he said. “There’s a lot of retail real estate out there. And it’s very diverse, and retailers go in and out of product all the time. And I don’t think you can look at one particular segment or one particular market.” To contact the reporters on this story: Matt Townsend in New York at mtownsend9@bloomberg.net ; Prashant Gopal in New York at Pgopal2@bloomberg.net ; Daniel Taub in Los Angeles at dtaub@bloomberg.net .

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AIG Chairman Says Feinberg’s Pay Limits Hindered Repayment of U.S. Bailout

February 27, 2010

By Hugh Son Feb. 27 (Bloomberg) — American International Group Inc. Chairman Harvey Golub told shareholders that decisions by U.S. paymaster Kenneth Feinberg to limit compensation at the government-owned insurer made “little business sense” and hurt the firm’s ability to repay its bailout. Golub, who became AIG chairman in August, made the comments in a letter to shareholders posted yesterday on AIG’s Web site . The New York-based insurer’s board is focused on working with the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and Treasury Department and “dealing with” Feinberg’s pay guidelines, Golub wrote. “While we can pay the vast majority of people competitively, on occasion, these restrictions and his decisions have yielded outcomes that make little business sense,” Golub, 70, said of Feinberg. “In some cases we are prevented from providing market-competitive compensation to retain some of our most experienced and best executives. This hurts the business and makes it harder to repay the taxpayers.” Feinberg, the Obama administration’s special master on executive pay, has instituted a $500,000 base salary cap for most AIG employees. He has made exceptions for those deemed necessary for the insurer’s success, including Chief Executive Officer Robert Benmosche , who secured a $7 million salary and $3.5 million in long-term incentive awards. “AIG owes the taxpayer a huge amount of money and we want to make sure that my compensation practices take into account the need for AIG to thrive,” Feinberg said in a Dec. 11 interview with Bloomberg Television. AIG received a $182.3 billion bailout. AIG plans to add several directors to its board because the workload required “is as high as I’ve ever seen in any company and is likely to continue for some time,” wrote Golub, the former chairman and CEO of American Express Co. Dammerman Retires Dennis Dammerman , the former Discover Financial Services chairman elected to AIG’s board in November 2008, will retire for “personal health reasons,” Golub wrote. Dammerman led the board search committee that selected Benmosche last year. Mark Herr , a spokesman for AIG, declined to comment. To contact the reporter on this story: Hugh Son in New York at hson1@bloomberg.net

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Transgene Attack on Lung Cancer May Yield $1.6 Billion Tumor-Fighting Drug

February 26, 2010

By Andrea Gerlin Feb. 26 (Bloomberg) — Investors are counting on Transgene SA to attract a drugmaker to help fund development and promote what may become the first product to attack lung cancer by stimulating patients’ immune systems. Transgene, whose biggest shareholder is the French family headed by Alain Merieux , needs a partner to meet the $30 million to $50 million cost of final tests on the TG4010 vaccine, said Gary Waanders , a London analyst at Nomura Code Securities Ltd., citing his estimate for the price of a 1,000-patient trial. The chances Transgene will attract a drugmaker rose Dec. 1 when U.S. regulators granted TG4010 fast-track status, meaning a shortened review for a product that may be better than available treatments. TG4010 helped prolong the median survival time by about six months for people with normal levels of a type of immune cell known as natural killer cells, Transgene said in February 2009. Twice as many patients responded to treatment with TG4010 as with chemotherapy alone, the company said . “It’s two times better than what we have today, than other products for non-small cell lung cancer,” said Arnaud Guerin , an analyst at Portzamparc Societe de Bourse SA in Nantes. Transgene rose 5 cents, or 0.2 percent, to 20.50 euros in Paris trading yesterday. The shares, bolstered by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration recommendation and the prospect of a licensing deal, have climbed 17 percent since Dec. 1. Waanders is the only one of six analysts in a Bloomberg survey who doesn’t recommend buying the stock. Possible Announcement The company is close to selling rights on TG4010, said Pierre Corby , an analyst at Aurel BGC in Paris, in a Feb. 16 interview. Pfizer Inc. , Roche AG, Novartis AG and Sanofi-Aventis SA are potential partners, Corby said. Corby said he was told by Transgene Chief Executive Officer Philippe Archinard and another company official in January that terms of a deal had been set. Transgene, based near Strasbourg, France, said in a Dec. 1 statement that it “hoped to reach a collaborative agreement” around the end of last year. The company’s financial chief, Philippe Poncet , said in 2008 that Roche, Novartis and Sanofi may be interested in TG4010. Transgene executives haven’t commented publicly this year on their search for a drugmaking partner. Archinard and Poncet declined to comment for this article, Elisabetta Castelli, a spokeswoman, said on Feb. 23. She cited the possibility of a news announcement in early March as the reason. Sales Forecast Nina Schwab-Hautzinger , a spokeswoman for Basel, Switzerland-based Roche, declined to comment. So did Eric Althoff , a spokesman for Basel-based Novartis. Geoffroy Bessaud , a spokesman for Sanofi-Aventis in Paris, and Ray Kerins , a spokesman for Pfizer in New York, also had no comment. Peak sales may reach 1.15 billion euros ($1.6 billion) in 2018 if TG4010 makes it to the market, possibly as early as 2015, said Aurel’s Corby. The analyst recommended buying Transgene in December 2008, when the market price was 12.10 euros, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. His price target was 16 euros, later raised to 22.50 euros and most recently to 26 euros, a level set after the FDA granted fast-track status to TG4010. If the medicine is cleared for other types of cancer, annual sales may reach $3 billion, said Guerin of Portzamparc Societe de Bourse, assuming a treatment price of 10,000 euros. Transgene currently has no marketed products. TG4010 is designed to spur the immune system to fight malignancies. Enlisting the help of a large drugmaker may help Transgene reach the market before GlaxoSmithKline Plc and Merck KGaA , which are also developing lung cancer vaccines, Corby said. Survival Benefit Data released in February 2009 from a mid-stage study of 148 patients indicated that TG4010 combined with chemotherapy extended survival of advanced non-small cell lung-cancer patients with normal levels of natural killer cells by 17 months, compared with 11 months for chemotherapy alone. “The data they showed from this trial was a dream, so it makes sense to pursue it,” said Robert Dreicer, chairman of solid-tumor oncology at the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio, in a Feb. 4 interview. Dreicer, a member of Transgene’s scientific advisory board, led a mid-stage trial of TG4010 for prostate cancer. Christoph Rochlitz, an oncologist at University Hospital Basel, in Switzerland, said he doubts the survival benefit. “Very frequently, the inclusion criteria for Phase II studies lead to a seemingly ‘better survival’ compared to Phase III trials,” Rochlitz said in a Feb. 2 e-mail. Phase III is the last of three sets of trials ordinarily required for regulatory approval. ‘Well Tolerated’ Rochlitz was involved in a Phase I trial of TG4010. That research, published in August 2003, found the medicine “was generally well tolerated in patients with metastatic tumors.” Lung cancer kills about 1.3 million people each year, more than any other malignancy, according to the Geneva-based World Health Organization. About 85 percent of patients die within five years of diagnosis. Unlike immunizations that prevent disease from taking hold, so-called therapeutic cancer vaccines are aimed at helping the body to fight disease once it occurs. The only such product on the market is Vitespen, which was approved in Russia for kidney cancer last year after being rebuffed in the U.S., according to Cornelia Thomas , an analyst for WestLB AG in London. Vitespen is made by Antigenics Inc., a biotechnology company based in Lexington, Massachusetts. ‘Promising’ Data More vaccines may be coming down the track. Twelve of the 50 cancer therapies in late-stage clinical trials as of 2008 were therapeutic vaccines, according IMS Health Inc., a research company in Norwalk, Connecticut. “The Phase III data which is coming forward from a number of trials looks promising,” said Karen Anderson, an oncologist at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute’s Cancer Vaccines Center, in Boston, in a Feb. 4 interview. “The actual benefit remains to be proven.” Anderson has no ties to Transgene. Glaxo, of London, began the final trials of its MAGE-A3 vaccine for lung cancer in 2007 and for melanoma in 2009. Family-controlled Merck KGaA — based in Darmstadt, Germany, and not affiliated to Merck & Co. of Whitehouse Station, New Jersey — began final tests of its Stimuvax vaccine in lung cancer in 2007 and in breast cancer last year. The lung cancer studies may take four to five years to complete. The biggest investor in Transgene is Institut Merieux , the Lyon, France-based holding company for Alain Merieux and his family. Forbes magazine last year estimated Merieux’s fortune at $2.4 billion, ranking him 285th among the world’s richest people. The institute owns 55 percent of Transgene as well as 59 percent of BioMerieux SA, a publicly traded diagnostics company based in Marcy L’Etoile, France. Natural Killers Transgene plans to enroll 1,000 patients with normal levels of natural killer, or NK, cells in TG4010’s final test. People with that cell type survived longer in mid-stage tests than those without it. About 75 percent of the population has normal levels of NK cells, a type of white blood cell. Glaxo is enrolling patients with early or moderately advanced lung cancer. Merck KGaA is focusing on patients with more advanced levels of the disease, while Transgene is targeting those with the gravest prognoses. Transgene had 72.9 million euros of cash as of Sept. 30. It expects to use 25 million to 30 million euros a year this year and next. Corby estimated a partnership may bring in as much as 400 million euros. Transgene also has a 218 million-euro agreement with Roche, the world’s biggest maker of cancer treatments, for the development of TG4001, an experimental vaccine to treat precancerous lesions that might lead to cervical cancer. To contact the reporter responsible for this story: Andrea Gerlin in London at agerlin@bloomberg.net

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U.K. Emerges From Recession at Faster Pace Than Estimated, Boosting Brown

February 26, 2010

By Svenja O’Donnell Feb. 26 (Bloomberg) — Britain emerged from recession at a faster pace than previously estimated in the fourth quarter as services output jumped, providing a boost for Prime Minister Gordon Brown as he prepares for a general election within weeks. Gross domestic product rose 0.3 percent from the third quarter, compared with a previous calculation of 0.1 percent growth, the Office for National Statistics said today in London. The median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey of 27 economists was for a 0.2 percent increase. Brown is seeking to persuade voters his Labour government has the best policies to cement the recovery. The Conservatives’ poll lead has narrowed to as little as six percentage points as ministers argue that David Cameron ’s plan to cut spending this year risks plunging the economy into a “double-dip” recession. “Today’s figures should help to alleviate some of the gloom and uncertainty that descended on markets about U.K. economic prospects,” said Philip Shaw , chief economist at Investec Securities in London. “It will help Brown. We’ll see a slow and steady momentum building up in growth through 2010.” The pound was little changed at $1.5256 at 10:04 a.m. in London. Government bonds fell, with the yield on the 10-year benchmark rising 3 basis points to 4.06 percent. The two-year yield was little changed at 0.94 percent. The upward revision came as services growth was revised to 0.5 percent, the biggest gain since the first quarter of 2008, from a previous estimate of 0.1 percent, the statistics office said. Industrial production growth was revised to 0.4 percent from 0.1 percent, with manufacturing rising 0.8 percent instead of 0.4 percent. Consumer Spending Consumer spending rose 0.4 percent, the biggest increase since the first quarter of 2008, and government spending gained 1.2 percent. Fixed capital investment fell 3.1 percent on the quarter. Revisions to previous quarters meant that the economy shrank 6.2 percent since the first quarter of 2008, making the recession the deepest on record. The figures may ease concerns that the economy may struggle to maintain momentum in the first quarter after heavy snow disrupted business and a temporary cut in value-added tax expired on Dec. 31. Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling “has always said that the economy would return to growth by the turn of 2009 and today’s second estimate continues to bear that judgment out,” said a spokesman for the Treasury who declined to be named. “Withdrawing the support that has helped us get to this point would put the recovery at risk.” Deficit Pledge Darling has pledged to delay cutting the deficit until 2011, saying Conservative plans to start this year may wreck the recovery. At more than 12 percent of GDP, Britain’s budget deficit is on a par with that of Greece. While Brown has until June to hold the election, Labour Party documents point to a vote to coincide with local authority polls on May 6 — less than two weeks after the statistics office publishes its preliminary estimate of first-quarter GDP. Britain was the last Group of Seven nation to exit recession, and policy makers say the recovery is far from assured as credit strains persist. The Bank of England last week cut its forecast for growth this year to 1.4 percent from 2.2 percent and Governor Mervyn King left the door open to expanding its 200 billion-pound ($300 billion) asset-purchase program if needed. Bank of England policy maker David Miles said yesterday that “the strength of any prospective recovery is highly uncertain.” To contact the reporter on this story: Svenja O’Donnell in London at sodonnell@bloomberg.net .

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Fed Fails to Get Credit-Default Swap Users to Accept Clearinghouse Target

February 25, 2010

By Shannon D. Harrington and Matthew Leising Feb. 25 (Bloomberg) — The biggest credit-default swaps investors oppose targets for clearing trades as regulators attempt to curb risk in the $25 trillion market. Pacific Investment Management Co., BlueMountain Capital Management LLC and AllianceBernstein LP are among asset managers and hedge funds that won’t agree to specific goals before the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s March 1 deadline requiring them to outline the industry’s next steps to move swaps through clearinghouses, according to people familiar with the matter who declined to be identified because the talks are private. While the New York Fed prodded JPMorgan Chase & Co., Deutsche Bank AG, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and other dealers into clearing more than 90 percent of eligible trades by the end of 2009, their clients are resisting on concern that the potential added costs would outweigh benefits. Clearinghouses are designed to contain losses if a major dealer or investor collapses. Investors “have a fiduciary duty to their clients,” said Brian Yelvington , head of fixed-income strategy at Knight Libertas LLC, a broker-dealer in Greenwich, Connecticut,. “If they have any doubts as to the efficacy of a program or as to the safety of money involved in such a program, they can’t really do it.” Bear Stearns, Lehman The Fed demanded the industry clear the privately negotiated derivatives when the near-collapse of American International Group Inc. and Bear Stearns Cos. and the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. in 2008 sparked concern that a surge of unregulated trading threatened to create a cascade of failures. The asset managers, while backing efforts to broaden the use of clearinghouses, want assurances that cleared trades would be protected under bankruptcy laws, the people said. They’re also concerned they may be saddled with collateral costs that are double or triple what they’re paying now because they could lose benefits now granted by prime brokers that give credit for offsetting trades, the people said. For example, hedge funds and other asset managers often will perform trades that seek to profit from price dislocations between index contracts and swaps on companies included in the index. Prime brokers typically will demand collateral on the net amount at risk from offsetting trades. Tying Up Cash If one leg of the trade were required to be cleared, while the other contracts aren’t eligible, fund managers may be forced to increase the amount they have to post, tying up cash, the people said. The New York Fed has led regulators including the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the U.K.’s Financial Services Authority and Germany’s Federal Financial Supervisory Authority in seeking increased transparency and less risk from over-the-counter derivatives markets. Some $605 trillion in contracts were outstanding at the end of June 2009, according to the Bank for International Settlements. Credit-default swaps are financial instruments based on bonds and loans that are used to speculate on or hedge a company’s ability to repay debt. They pay the buyer face value in exchange for the underlying securities or the cash equivalent should a borrower fail to adhere to its debt agreements. Clearing More Trades Dealers have been clearing a growing number of trades between themselves. By the end of 2009, $5.1 trillion of the $5.5 trillion in contracts that were eligible had been moved through clearinghouses, Athanassios Diplas , co-chairman of the credit-steering committee for the International Swaps and Derivatives Association, said in a January interview. Diplas is head of systemic risk management for global credit trading at Deutsche Bank in New York. That surpassed a dealer commitment made last year to clear 80 percent of all eligible credit swaps. During a Jan. 14 meeting hosted by the New York Fed, dealers promised to expand the types of contracts that can be accepted by the two leading clearinghouses, which are run by Atlanta-based Intercontinental Exchange Inc. and CME Group Inc . of Chicago. The companies primarily have only been accepting contracts tied to credit indexes, which make up $7.55 trillion, or 30 percent of the outstanding contracts, New York-based Depository Trust & Clearing Corp. data show. Continued Negotiations The group of at least 15 dealers, 9 investment firms and 3 trade associations will commit to continued negotiations with the central bank to resolve obstacles preventing more contracts from being cleared, according to the people familiar with the discussions. David Kaiyalethe, a spokesman for BlueMountain in New York, declined to comment. Pimco spokesman Mark Porterfield didn’t return a telephone call, and AllianceBernstein spokesman John Meyers didn’t return e-mail or phone messages seeking comment. David Girardin , a spokesman for the New York Fed, declined to comment. Derivatives are contracts used to protect against changes in stocks, bonds, currencies, commodities, interest rates and weather. “There is a lot of hassle involved, and it’s costly” to clear credit swaps, said Darrell Duffie , a finance professor at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California. “I don’t think they’ve pointed out any unintended consequences that regulators have overlooked.” Duffie co-wrote a report last month on increasing price transparency in swaps markets and improved oversight with Theo Lubke , the New York Fed official responsible for the central bank’s efforts to curb risks in the derivatives markets. Proposal Before Congress Market participants may also hesitate to make promises before Congress acts on proposed legislation that may force most swaps traders to clear actively traded contracts. “There’s still quite a bit of legislative and regulatory maneuvering before we are left with a standardized clearing mechanism,” Yelvington said. “They don’t know six months, nine months down the road what it’s going to look like. So if they commit to something now, they essentially commit in a vacuum.” BlueMountain pushed in June for more access to clearinghouses so hedge funds could have the same protections that banks are afforded. “The dealer community may be filibustering to protect its oligopoly and not seriously engaged in working with the buy side to develop a clearing solution,” Samuel Cole , the chief operating officer at New York-based BlueMountain, the hedge fund whose founders helped pioneer credit-default swaps, said in a June 1 letter to banks. Now, some firms may be having second thoughts, said Kevin McPartland , a senior analyst at Tabb Group in New York. “They want the ability, but on the other hand, they don’t want to be forced” to clear credit swaps, he said. To contact the reporters on this story: Shannon D. Harrington in New York at sharrington6@bloomberg.net ; To contact the reporter on this story: Matthew Leising in New York at mleising@bloomberg.net .

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Hedge Funds Lure More Cash From Pensions Seeking to Fix Benefit Shortfall

February 24, 2010

By Saijel Kishan and Katherine Burton Feb. 25 (Bloomberg) — Florida’s state pension system , manager of $112 billion for a million firefighters, teachers and garbage collectors, is set to decide next week on the size of its first investment in hedge funds. Executives of the fourth-largest state retirement program in the U.S., who have considered putting money into the private pools of capital since 2007, will make the move amid a 7 percent shortfall in its ability to pay future benefits, the first in 13 years. Wisconsin’s pension also plans its initial allocation this year, while Boeing Co. ’s probably will raise its holdings. Public and private pensions are increasing hedge-fund commitments after slowing the flow of cash at the end of 2008. About 15 percent of U.S. institutions plan to boost their allocations, and 80 percent will keep them steady, according to a survey by SEI Investments Co. The investors are seeking to accelerate returns after losses during the financial crisis. “In 2008, everyone stopped allocating,” said David McMillan , director of hedge funds at Hammond Associates Inc. , a St. Louis, Missouri-based consultant that advises pension funds with $23 billion in assets. “I expect to see the pace of investing pick up.” Pension managers with hedge-fund holdings oversee about $3.2 trillion, according to Casey, Quirk & Associates LLC , a consulting firm based in Darien, Connecticut. While no estimates are available for how much money these funds might allocate in 2010, a 1 percent increase would translate to about $32 billion in inflows for the $1.6 trillion industry. Below Targets Corporate pensions are about half a percentage point below their average hedge-fund target of 10.2 percent of assets, while public systems are 1.4 percentage points below their 7.8 percent goal, according to SEI , an Oaks, Pennsylvania-based investment manager and consultant. Both groups raised their targets in 2009, setting the stage for new investments this year. U.S. states face a gap of more than $1 trillion between what they have saved and what they have promised to retired workers in pension and health-care benefits, according to a report released this month by the Pew Center on the States, a Washington-based research and advocacy group. The 100 largest corporate pension funds had a $324 billion shortfall as of January, according to a statement by Seattle-based consultant Milliman Inc. Equities Not Enough “Pension funds want to reduce the volatility of returns, and they don’t think equities will get them to their return targets,” said John Haugh , head of U.S. pensions and endowments research at Bank of America Merrill Lynch Global Research in New York. U.S. stocks, as measured by the Russell 3000 Index , are about 20 percent below their level in 2000. With interest rates just above record lows, returns on government bonds, a staple of pension-fund holdings, have declined. Public pensions rose an average of 3.7 percent annually in the past 10 years, while corporate plans gained 3.6 percent, Haugh said. Both have a target of 8 percent. Haugh said pensions also will invest in commodities, real estate, Treasury Inflation Protected Securities and natural resources such as timberland to counter their expectations of rising inflation. Hedge funds gained an average of 6.6 percent a year in the past decade through Jan. 31, according to the Credit Suisse Tremont Index. That compares with an average annual loss of about 1 percent by the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index and a 6.6 percent return by U.S. bonds, based on the Barclays Capital U.S. Aggregate Index. Redemptions End Investors pulled $298 billion out of hedge funds from Oct. 1, 2008, through June 30, 2009, according to Hedge Fund Research Inc. A net $15 billion flowed back in during the second half of last year, data from the Chicago-based research firm show. Funds attracted $140 million in inflows in January, Eurekahedge Pte, a Singapore-based research firm, said yesterday. “The majority of dollars coming into hedge funds in the next 12 months will primarily come from pension plans,” said David Harmston , head of the client group at London-based Albourne Partners Ltd., which advises 36 pension plans with $40 billion invested in the funds. The biggest funds, with extensive infrastructure and risk- management systems, are benefiting the most. Steven Cohen’s SAC Capital Advisors LP pulled in $1.3 billion between June and December, and Tudor Investment Corp.’s BVI Global Fund Ltd. raised the same amount between March and July before closing to new cash. SAC is based in Stamford, Connecticut, while Tudor is run by Paul Tudor Jones in Greenwich, Connecticut. Florida, Wisconsin Pension funds and endowments invested $7.67 billion in hedge funds last year, a decline of 47 percent from 2007, according to Eager, Davis & Holmes LLC, a consultant based in Louisville, Kentucky, that tracks money-management hiring. In Florida, the retirement system designated $1.75 billion during the year ending in June for assets that include timberland and infrastructure, Dennis MacKee , a spokesman for the State Board of Administration in Tallahassee, said in a telephone interview. Its investment advisory council will discuss how much of that money to steer into hedge funds when it meets March 3. Wisconsin Retirement System , which oversees $72 billion and was 88 percent funded at the end of 2009, is planning to invest in hedge funds for the first time this year, according to Vicky Hearing , a spokeswoman for the Madison, Wisconsin-based plan. “We are looking to diversify to reduce volatility in our overall portfolio,” she said in a telephone interview. The pension fund plans to initially invest in 15 managers and increase that number to 25, according to a December report. More Direct Investments In 2009, about 80 percent of the money invested in hedge funds went through middlemen known as funds of funds, according to Eager Davis. Some pensions are looking to deal directly with fund managers. Boeing, the second-largest U.S. defense contractor, expects to add about $400 million this year to the $1.3 billion it has with hedge funds, according to Todd Blecher , a spokesman for the Chicago-based company. Hedge-fund holdings of the plan, which oversees $46 billion, are done through middlemen, though the company may begin making direct investments, he said. Universities Superannuation Scheme , which oversees 30 billion pounds ($46 billion) for U.K. university employees, is one of the pension managers that first invested directly when it started allocating to hedge funds last year. “We want to have control, transparency and responsibility over picking managers,” Mike Powell , who oversees the organization’s alternative assets out of London, said in a telephone interview. “While fund of funds may add value on a gross basis, the fee drag means that the net returns are not enough to justify the risk.” Adding Fund Managers The pension plan has about 300 million pounds in hedge funds and expects to increase that to 1.5 billion pounds by investing on average as much as 75 million pounds in one manager a month, Powell said. Hedge-fund managers bet on falling and rising assets prices and take a cut of profits. They charge investors fees of about 2 percent of assets and 20 percent of investment gains. Funds of funds charge 1 percent of assets and 10 percent of profits on top of those fees. In the Netherlands, PGGM , a nonprofit that manages funds for Pensioenfonds Zorg en Welzijn, plans to move away from funds of funds and invest the 1.7 billion euros ($2.3 billion) it has in directly, according to an e-mail from Diana Abrahams, a spokeswoman. Zeist, Netherlands-based PGGM manages 87 billion euros. Skeptics Remain As of September 2009, public funds had about 52 percent in stocks, 29.5 percent in bonds, 16.8 percent in alternatives and 1.5 percent in cash, according to Bank of America Merrill. Corporate funds had 45.1 percent in stocks, 36.9 percent in bonds, 15.9 percent in alternatives and 2.1 percent in cash. Most pension managers include hedge funds in the alternative category. Not all retirement plans are convinced that the funds are for them. “We’re a conservative investor and hedge funds are too risky and flashy for our portfolio,” Ricardo Duran , a spokesman for the $134 billion California State Teachers’ Retirement System in West Sacramento, California, said in a telephone interview. Calsters is the second-largest state retirement program after the $200 billion California Public Employees’ Retirement System. Seeking Comfort Level Among the reasons why pension funds are hesitant to put money with hedge funds is that they lack an understanding of what they are invested in, said Daniel Celeghin , a partner at Casey Quirk. “Some of the investment strategies that hedge-fund managers use are so esoteric that board members are saying, ‘I don’t understand this 100 percent, so let’s go slowly,’ ” he said. Among those still reviewing the level of hedge-fund holdings is the School Employees Retirement System of Ohio , which invests about 3.3 percent of the $9 billion it manages in the private partnerships. “Hedge funds are new to us and so we’re still trying to get comfortable with them,” said Tim Babour , a spokesman for the Columbus-based plan, which made its first investment in hedge funds in 2008. To contact the reporters on this story: Saijel Kishan in New York at skishan@bloomberg.net ; Katherine Burton in New York at kburton@bloomberg.net

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Brookfield Asset Plans to Bid for a Stake in General Growth, WSJ Reports

February 23, 2010

By Daniel Taub Feb. 23 (Bloomberg) — Brookfield Asset Management Inc. plans to bid for a stake in General Growth Properties Inc., beating an offer by Simon Property Group Inc. for the bankrupt shopping mall owner, the Wall Street Journal reported. The bid would allow Chicago-based General Growth to exit Chapter 11 bankruptcy as a standalone company with Brookfield, the Toronto-based real estate investor, as its largest shareholder, the Wall Street Journal reported on its Web site, citing people familiar with the plan. Simon , the largest U.S. shopping mall owner, has offered to purchase its biggest rival in a deal that would give equity investors about $9 a share and repay unsecured creditors in full. General Growth said the bid, made public on Feb. 16, was too low and would invite other potential buyers to make offers. Brookfield owns almost $1 billion in General Growth debt, two people with knowledge of the company’s holdings said last week. General Growth may raise $1 billion to $2 billion from public markets — or more, were investor demand sufficient — to fund its exit from bankruptcy, according to one of those people, who asked not to be named because the talks are private. Brookfield would invest at least $2 billion, making the company the largest buyer in General Growth’s stock sale, the Journal said. Brookfield’s plan may be announced as soon as this week, the newspaper said. Denis Couture , a Brookfield spokesman, declined to comment. David Keating , a spokesman for General Growth, said he had no immediate comment. Shares Rise General Growth’s shares rallied past Simon’s buyout offer to close yesterday at $12.76, signaling that investors expect a higher bid. William Ackman’s Pershing Square Capital Management LP, General Growth’s largest shareholder, in December issued a 54-page presentation that said the stock is worth $24 to $43. Pershing Square, based in New York, owns a 25 percent economic interest in General Growth, including 7.5 percent of its shares. Based on the current valuations for U.S. mall owners and Simon and Brookfield’s “strong strategic and financial motivations,” General Growth is probably worth $11 to $18 a share, Green Street Advisors Inc. , a Newport Beach, California- based research company, said in a Jan. 13 note. General Growth, the owner of New York’s South Street Seaport and Boston’s Faneuil Hall, filed the biggest real-estate bankruptcy in U.S. history in April after amassing $27 billion in debt during an acquisition spree. Debt Acquired Brookfield said in a Feb. 19 letter to shareholders that it “acquired a substantial amount of defaulted bank debt issued by General Growth Properties” at a discount to par value. In a fourth-quarter earnings conference call that day, Brookfield Chief Executive Officer Bruce Flatt and other executives declined to discuss General Growth. Flatt said in his Feb. 19 letter that Brookfield believes that “acquiring assets through distress situations offers one of the few ways to acquire assets at meaningful discounts to their intrinsic value.” Brookfield owns more than 100 office buildings; 2.9 million acres of timber and agricultural land in Canada, the U.S. and Brazil; apartment complexes; 20 shipping terminals in Europe and Australia; 164 hydroelectric plants; railroads in Australia; natural-gas pipelines in the U.S.; and a property-brokerage business with almost 40,000 brokers in about 2,000 offices in Canada, the U.S. and the U.K. Brookfield last year assembled a $5 billion equity group to invest in distressed properties. Blackstone Group LP , the world’s largest private-equity firm, may join Simon’s bid, two people with knowledge of the discussions said on Feb. 18. Blackstone is in preliminary talks with Simon, said the people, who declined to be identified because the negotiations are private. Simon would lead any resulting partnership, one of the people said. To contact the reporter on this story: Daniel Taub in Los Angeles at dtaub@bloomberg.net .

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Toyota Saved $100 Million in `Favorable’ 2007 U.S. Recall, Document Shows

February 21, 2010

By Jeff Green and Jeff Plungis Feb. 22 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp. saved $100 million through a “negotiated” equipment recall on Toyota Camry and Lexus ES models and closed several additional U.S. defect investigations with “favorable” outcomes, according to document sent to a U.S. congressional committee. In other accomplishments described as “Wins for Toyota” the carmaker said it reduced or delayed the effect of proposed rules to require more rollover-resistant roofs, better door locks and stronger protection in side-impact crashes, according to the document that was turned over to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform and obtained yesterday. Delaying the rules was credited with saving about $135 million. The document, dated July 6, 2009, may add to questions for President Akio Toyoda as congressional committees open hearings this week into how Toyota and U.S. regulators handled evidence of unintended acceleration that has led to recalls of more than 8 million vehicles worldwide since September. Toyota has said the recalls may cost about $2 billion in lost sales and warranty repairs. Floor Mats The $100 million in savings referred to a 2007 investigation in which Toyota recalled 55,000 vehicles, citing the potential for floor mats to trap accelerator pedals, after an investigation by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. “Our first priority is the safety of our customers and to conclude otherwise on the basis of one internal presentation is wrong,” the company said in an e-mail. “Our values have always been to put the customer first and ensure the highest levels of safety and quality.” The Detroit News reported the Toyota document earlier. Toyota shares rose 2.7 percent to 3,390 yen as of 10:17 a.m. in Tokyo. The internal Toyota document, which highlights accomplishments of the Washington office of the world’s largest automaker, also said the company was able to avoid investigations of the Tacoma pickup for rust as well as resolve a labeling recall without civil penalties and saving $20 million in buybacks. Delays Toyota saved thousands of hours of labor by delaying NHTSA’s revamped consumer ratings, the New Car Assessment Program, according to the document. The program grades new models on a five-star scale based on how well they fare in crash tests. “Unfortunately, this document is very telling,” said Olivia Alair , a U.S. Transportation Department spokeswoman. “We’re going to hold Toyota’s feet to the fire and make sure they do what’s necessary to make their cars safe for the driving public.” Toyota has said that President Toyoda will testify at the Feb. 24 Oversight Committee hearing. That’s important because “he’s the only person that can speak for a global enterprise” about “getting those problems addressed quickly,” Representative Darrell Issa , the senior Republican on the House oversight panel said on Bloomberg Television. Toyota’s “pattern of hiding” will be examined by the committee at a Feb. 24 hearing, Issa said Feb. 19 in a Bloomberg Television interview. ‘Accept Criticism’ “I will willingly accept criticism of our handling” of the recalls, Toyoda told reporters in Japan on Feb. 19. “I would like to promote understanding of our feelings toward customers and toward the U.S.” The automaker also faces hearings by congressional panels tomorrow and March 2 into its series of recalls. Last week, U.S. regulators said they’re investigating the Toyota City, Japan- based company’s Corolla sedan, the world’s top-selling car, for a possible steering flaw. “Did regulators do their due diligence once problems were brought to their attention?”  Kurt Bardella , a spokesman for Issa, wrote in an e-mail. “If anything but the safety of America’s drivers influenced the decision-making process, the entire purpose of NHTSA will be undermined.” Toyota vehicles experiencing sudden unintended acceleration have been linked to 34 deaths, according to consumer complaints filed with NHTSA. To contact the reporters on this story: Jeff Green in Southfield, Michigan, at jgreen16@bloomberg.net ; Jeff Plungis in Washington at jplungis@bloomberg.net .

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Sebelius Renews Attack on Health Insurers as Obama Readies Overhaul Plan

February 19, 2010

By James Rowley and Nicole Gaouette Feb. 19 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama is preparing to release a proposal to restart the health-care debate before a White House meeting next week as the administration signaled that insurance company practices will be a focus of the talks. Obama will offer “one proposal” that takes “some of the best ideas” from House and Senate bills “and put them into a framework moving forward,” Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said yesterday. A senior White House official said the plan will be posted by the morning of Feb. 22. Obama invited Republican leaders to the Feb. 25 meeting and challenged them to present their own health-care plan. Democrats in Congress are still reconciling differences between versions of legislation passed last year by the House and Senate that’s aimed at expanding coverage to millions of uninsured Americans while curbing costs. House Democrats say that while the two chambers are close to an agreement, they may not have a unified plan in time for the televised meeting. “I don’t know whether the president is going to put one particular piece of legislation on the table,” Representative Chris Van Hollen of Maryland told reporters during a Feb. 17 conference call. Jim Manley , a spokesman for Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid , also declined to say whether there would be an agreement among Democrats before the meeting. Attacking Insurers The Obama administration, meanwhile, renewed its criticism of insurers yesterday, with Sebelius releasing a report highlighting 2009 premium increases that she said “are five to 10 times larger than the growth rate in national health expenditures.” The report also focused on 2009 profits and executive pay at U.S. insurers such as WellPoint Inc. It follows her inquiry into Indianapolis-based WellPoint’s proposed 39 percent rise in premiums for Californians who buy their own insurance. WellPoint has been called to testify before Congress about the increase. Sebelius said during a news conference that insurance company profits are “way over anybody’s estimates.” She said the five largest U.S. insurers took in combined profits of $12.2 billion in 2009, 56 percent higher than in 2008. “They’re also companies where the top executives are paid up to $24 million each,” she said. ‘Politics of Vilification’ Insurers said they are being scapegoated. “It’s time to stop the politics of vilification,” Karen Ignagni , president of America’s Health Insurance Plans , said in a statement. Ignagni attributed rising costs in the individual market to “the urgent need to reduce the growth of underlying medical costs and to bring everyone into the system.” WellPoint executives said unexpectedly high costs made the California premium increase necessary. “Premiums were insufficient to cover the higher costs,” Brian Sassi , head of WellPoint’s consumer business unit, said in an interview yesterday. Bradley Fluegel , the company’s chief strategy officer, said the increase wasn’t making up for money lost in 2009. “We’ve already lost that money,” he said. “We just have to reflect on a go-forward basis the higher costs.” Shares of WellPoint, the biggest U.S. insurer of individuals and small businesses, have dropped 11 percent over the past month. It’s been the worst performer over that time in the six-member Standard & Poor’s 500 Managed-Care Index , which has fallen 6.7 percent. Expanding Insurance The attack on the insurers may be a theme White House officials will stress at next week’s summit. Both the House and Senate bills would place new limits on insurers, barring them from rejecting clients because of a pre- existing condition. They would also require all Americans to get insurance or pay a penalty, offering government aid and creating online exchanges where individuals and small businesses could shop for insurance. A compromise bill was set to pass both chambers when Democrats lost a special Senate election in Massachusetts that cost them the 60th seat they needed to overcome Republican efforts to block passage. Faced with the impasse, Obama invited Republicans to sit down with Democrats at the Feb. 25 meeting to discuss ways forward. Van Hollen, a member of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s leadership team, said Obama would use the forum “to get a sense of what our Republican colleagues’ objectives are” and “work to try to include those ideas.” Mike Steel , a spokesman for House Republican Leader John Boehner of Ohio, said if Democrats want bipartisan cooperation they must understand it “means a clean sheet of paper, not an infomercial for another Democratic backroom deal.” Reconciliation Option Should the Democrats be unable to gain any Republican support, one avenue open to them is using a budget process known as reconciliation that would require only a simple majority of 51 votes in the Senate. Still, that would force them to slim down the bill because it must be limited to spending and tax issues. Another alternative is for the House to try to pass the bill the Senate approved on Christmas Eve along with a reconciliation measure that would include some of the provisions favored by the House such as more generous subsidies to help people buy insurance and greater aid to the elderly in purchasing medication. To contact the reporter on this story: James Rowley in Washington at jarowley@bloomberg.net or Nicole Gaouette in Washington at at ngaouette@bloomberg.net

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Volcker Says U.S. Social Security the `Bedrock’ for Securing Retirement

February 19, 2010

By Margaret Collins Feb. 19 (Bloomberg) — Social Security can be reformed to secure Americans’ retirement savings, said Paul Volcker , a top adviser to President Barack Obama . “Social Security is the bedrock of any retirement policy in this country,” said Volcker, chairman of the president’s Economic Recovery Advisory Board, at a retirement forum in New York yesterday. “There’s plenty of room and plenty of need for retirement programs on top of that.” Having enough income for retirement has become a focus of the administration amid concerns that Americans will outlive their savings. The president’s fiscal 2011 budget proposed changing government rules to allow annuities within 401(k) plans and requiring most businesses that don’t offer retirement accounts to automatically enroll employees in direct-deposit Individual Retirement Accounts. “None of them stand out as the great savior,” Volcker said of the government proposals. Reforming Social Security is “doable,” he said, in part by “jacking up the retirement age” and changing the benefit calculation so that it won’t rise as fast for higher-income Americans as it does under existing law. About 63 percent of low-income workers may retire without any savings to supplement Social Security, according to a report by the Government Accountability Office, and 78 million Americans don’t have retirement plans through their employers, according to the government. Estate Tax Volcker spoke at an event organized by Axa Equitable Life Insurance Co., a unit of Axa SA , Europe’s second-biggest insurer. About 350 financial professionals and clients of the insurer attended, according to Michael Arcaro , a spokesman for Axa Equitable. The 82-year-old Volcker also said allowing the federal estate tax to expire Jan. 1 was “ridiculous” and “illustrative of the dysfunction in government.” If Congress doesn’t act, the estate tax will be reinstated in 2011 at a 55 percent rate on estates valued at more than $1 million. Volcker was chairman of the Federal Reserve from 1979 to 1987. — Editors: Rick Levinson , Sharon L. Lynch . To contact the reporter on this story: Margaret Collins in New York at mcollins45@bloomberg.net .

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Tesla’s Musk Says California Airplane Crash Killed Some Company Officials

February 17, 2010

By Ryan Flinn and Alan Ohnsman (Corrects spelling of hospital name in sixth paragraph.) Feb. 17 (Bloomberg) — Three Tesla Motors Inc. employees died in a plane crash today in a residential block of East Palo Alto, California, Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk said. The twin-engine Cessna 310, which crashed shortly after takeoff from Palo Alto Airport , was registered to Air Unique Inc. The address for that company is also the home address for Doug Bourn, an engineer at the electric carmaker, according to online listing service Switchboard.com. “We are withholding their identities as we work with the relevant authorities to notify the families,” Musk said in an e-mail. No injuries were reported on the ground, John Chalmers, a captain at the East Palo Alto Police Department, said in an interview. Power was knocked out citywide in Palo Alto, affecting about 28,000 customers, said Linda Clerkson, a spokeswoman for the city. Hewlett-Packard Co. and Facebook Inc. were among companies affected by the outage. “The plane, when taking off, struck a power tower, causing power outages throughout the area,” Chalmers said. “One of the wings came off, and hit a residential structure.” Stanford Hospital and Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital, located in Palo Alto, were operating on emergency power, according to Stanford University’s Web site . Power should be restored by 4:30 p.m. local time, said Joe Molica , a spokesman for utility PG&E Corp. The crash set two homes and several cars on fire, said Harold Schapelhouman, fire chief of nearby Menlo Park. The plane had been en route to Hawthorne Municipal Airport in Southern California, said Ian Gregor , a spokesman for the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration. The crash site is about a mile northwest of the airport and about 30 miles (48 kilometers) south of San Francisco. Foggy Conditions “It’s foggy, but air pilots that are instrument-rated have no problem taking off in those conditions,” said Carl Honaker, director of airports for Santa Clara County. Employees of Hewlett-Packard and Facebook were told to find alternate places to work for the time being, according to company representatives. Users’ ability to access Facebook’s site is unaffected, the social-networking company said. Stanford University is about 4 miles southwest of the crash site. The campus Web site said operating-room cases in progress at its hospitals are continuing, though nonemergency cases are on hold until further notice. To contact the reporter on this story: Ryan Flinn in San Francisco at rflinn@bloomberg.net ; Alan Ohnsman in Los Angeles at aohnsman@bloomberg.net

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Tesla’s Musk Says California Airplane Crash Killed Some Company Officials

February 17, 2010

By Ryan Flinn and Alan Ohnsman (Corrects spelling of hospital name in sixth paragraph.) Feb. 17 (Bloomberg) — Three Tesla Motors Inc. employees died in a plane crash today in a residential block of East Palo Alto, California, Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk said. The twin-engine Cessna 310, which crashed shortly after takeoff from Palo Alto Airport , was registered to Air Unique Inc. The address for that company is also the home address for Doug Bourn, an engineer at the electric carmaker, according to online listing service Switchboard.com. “We are withholding their identities as we work with the relevant authorities to notify the families,” Musk said in an e-mail. No injuries were reported on the ground, John Chalmers, a captain at the East Palo Alto Police Department, said in an interview. Power was knocked out citywide in Palo Alto, affecting about 28,000 customers, said Linda Clerkson, a spokeswoman for the city. Hewlett-Packard Co. and Facebook Inc. were among companies affected by the outage. “The plane, when taking off, struck a power tower, causing power outages throughout the area,” Chalmers said. “One of the wings came off, and hit a residential structure.” Stanford Hospital and Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital, located in Palo Alto, were operating on emergency power, according to Stanford University’s Web site . Power should be restored by 4:30 p.m. local time, said Joe Molica , a spokesman for utility PG&E Corp. The crash set two homes and several cars on fire, said Harold Schapelhouman, fire chief of nearby Menlo Park. The plane had been en route to Hawthorne Municipal Airport in Southern California, said Ian Gregor , a spokesman for the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration. The crash site is about a mile northwest of the airport and about 30 miles (48 kilometers) south of San Francisco. Foggy Conditions “It’s foggy, but air pilots that are instrument-rated have no problem taking off in those conditions,” said Carl Honaker, director of airports for Santa Clara County. Employees of Hewlett-Packard and Facebook were told to find alternate places to work for the time being, according to company representatives. Users’ ability to access Facebook’s site is unaffected, the social-networking company said. Stanford University is about 4 miles southwest of the crash site. The campus Web site said operating-room cases in progress at its hospitals are continuing, though nonemergency cases are on hold until further notice. To contact the reporter on this story: Ryan Flinn in San Francisco at rflinn@bloomberg.net ; Alan Ohnsman in Los Angeles at aohnsman@bloomberg.net

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Tesla’s Musk Says California Airplane Crash Killed Some Company Officials

February 17, 2010

By Ryan Flinn and Alan Ohnsman (Corrects spelling of hospital name in sixth paragraph.) Feb. 17 (Bloomberg) — Three Tesla Motors Inc. employees died in a plane crash today in a residential block of East Palo Alto, California, Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk said. The twin-engine Cessna 310, which crashed shortly after takeoff from Palo Alto Airport , was registered to Air Unique Inc. The address for that company is also the home address for Doug Bourn, an engineer at the electric carmaker, according to online listing service Switchboard.com. “We are withholding their identities as we work with the relevant authorities to notify the families,” Musk said in an e-mail. No injuries were reported on the ground, John Chalmers, a captain at the East Palo Alto Police Department, said in an interview. Power was knocked out citywide in Palo Alto, affecting about 28,000 customers, said Linda Clerkson, a spokeswoman for the city. Hewlett-Packard Co. and Facebook Inc. were among companies affected by the outage. “The plane, when taking off, struck a power tower, causing power outages throughout the area,” Chalmers said. “One of the wings came off, and hit a residential structure.” Stanford Hospital and Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital, located in Palo Alto, were operating on emergency power, according to Stanford University’s Web site . Power should be restored by 4:30 p.m. local time, said Joe Molica , a spokesman for utility PG&E Corp. The crash set two homes and several cars on fire, said Harold Schapelhouman, fire chief of nearby Menlo Park. The plane had been en route to Hawthorne Municipal Airport in Southern California, said Ian Gregor , a spokesman for the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration. The crash site is about a mile northwest of the airport and about 30 miles (48 kilometers) south of San Francisco. Foggy Conditions “It’s foggy, but air pilots that are instrument-rated have no problem taking off in those conditions,” said Carl Honaker, director of airports for Santa Clara County. Employees of Hewlett-Packard and Facebook were told to find alternate places to work for the time being, according to company representatives. Users’ ability to access Facebook’s site is unaffected, the social-networking company said. Stanford University is about 4 miles southwest of the crash site. The campus Web site said operating-room cases in progress at its hospitals are continuing, though nonemergency cases are on hold until further notice. To contact the reporter on this story: Ryan Flinn in San Francisco at rflinn@bloomberg.net ; Alan Ohnsman in Los Angeles at aohnsman@bloomberg.net

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Billionaire George Soros More Than Doubles Gold ETF Stake in 4th Quarter

February 17, 2010

By Katherine Burton and Glenys Sim Feb. 17 (Bloomberg) — Billionaire George Soros ’s Soros Fund Management LLC more than doubled its holding in the biggest gold exchange-traded fund in the fourth quarter after bullion advanced 8.9 percent to a record. The $25 billion New York-based firm became the fourth- largest holder in the SPDR Gold Trust, adding 3.728 million shares valued at $421 million, according to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission yesterday. Its investment was worth about $663 million, the fund’s largest single investment, as of Dec. 31. Soros joined China Investment Corp. and central banks including those in China and India in acquiring gold. China Investment, the $300 billion sovereign wealth fund based in Beijing, took a 1.45 million-share stake in the SPDR Gold Trust worth $155.6 million, according to a SEC 13F filing posted on Feb. 5. “The dollar is weak and people are just shifting their money into a safer haven,” Tetsuya Yoshii , vice president for derivative products at Mizuho Corporate Bank Ltd., said from Tokyo today. “Central banks are adding gold to their reserves and we’re going to see more people adding gold to their investment portfolio as they shift into safer stuff.” Gold for immediate delivery traded little changed at $1,118.35 an ounce at 2:48 p.m. in Singapore. It rose for a ninth straight year in 2009, reaching a record $1,226.56 an ounce on Dec. 3, as the dollar dropped 4.2 percent against a basket of six major currencies. ‘Ultimate Bubble’ India bought 200 metric tons from the International Monetary Fund in October, while China’s holdings have expanded 76 percent to 1,054 tons since 2003, it said in April. SEC filings are done quarterly, with a 45-day lag, so Soros could have sold some or all of the position since then. Soros, speaking last month at the World Economic Forum in Davos, called gold the “ultimate asset bubble” and said the price could tumble, according to a report in the U.K.’s Daily Telegraph newspaper. Money managers who oversee more than $100 million in equities must file a Form 13F listing their U.S.-traded stocks, options and convertible bonds. The filings don’t show non-U.S. securities or how much cash the firms hold. Michael Vachon , a spokesman for Soros, declined to comment on Soros’s investments. Assets held by the SPDR Gold Trust have expanded 2.2 percent this year after surging 24 percent in 2009. They stood at 1,109.42 metric tons yesterday. Institutional investor Paulson & Co. held the largest number of shares in the fund as of Dec. 31, with 8.65 percent, or 31.5 million shares. Gold demand grew 2.6 percent in the fourth quarter from the previous three months as investment and jewelry consumption climbed amid record prices, the World Gold Council said in a report today. Global consumption increased to 819.7 metric tons as prices averaged 15 percent more than the third quarter, the London-based industry group said. To contact the reporters on this story: Katherine Burton in New York at kburton@bloomberg.net ; Glenys Sim in Singapore at gsim4@bloomberg.net

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Belgian Train Crash Kills at Least 18: Links to London, Paris Suspended

February 15, 2010

By John Martens Feb. 15 (Bloomberg) — Two passenger trains collided head- on near Halle, Belgium, during morning rush hour, killing at least 18 commuters, Brussels prosecutors said. The crash forced a suspension of high-speed rail services linking Brussels with Paris and London. The number of dead is 18 to 20 and as many as 60 people were injured in the crash, Jos Colpin , a spokesman for the Brussels prosecutor’s office, said by telephone today. The judicial inquiry is led by investigating judge Jeroen Burm and may take months to complete, Colpin said. A commuter train heading from Leuven to Braine-le-Comte probably drove through a stop signal and hit another train heading from Quievrain to Liege north of the Halle station at about 8:30 a.m. local time, Lodewijk De Witte , governor of the province of Flemish Brabant, said at a briefing in Leuven, citing preliminary findings. A similar rail crash killed eight near the Belgian town of Pecrot in March 2001. Belgian railroad company NMBS/SNCB doesn’t want to speculate about the cause of the crash and prefers to wait for the outcome of the judicial investigation, Jochem Goovaerts, a spokesman for NMBS, said on Flemish VRT-Radio 1. The railroad company began equipping signals and train cars with an automated breaking system following the 2001 crash in Pecrot. Eurostar and Thalys high-speed rail services from Brussels to Paris and London have been suspended following the crash, the two international rail operators said on their Web sites. Eurostar services between Brussels and London will remain suspended tomorrow, according to an e-mailed statement from the company. To contact the reporter on this story: John Martens in Brussels at jmartens1@bloomberg.net

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Belgian Train Crash Kills 10; High-Speed Links to London, Paris Suspended

February 15, 2010

By John Martens Feb. 15 (Bloomberg) — Two passenger trains collided head- on near Halle, Belgium, killing at least 10 commuters, local authorities said. The crash forced a suspension of high-speed rail services linking Brussels with Paris and London. The number of casualties may rise as rescue workers are still looking for passengers caught in one of the wrecked train cars, Lodewijk De Witte, governor of the province of Flemish Brabant, said at a briefing in Leuven, Belgium, today. Eleven people, including one child, were seriously injured in the crash, he said. A commuter train heading from Leuven to Braine-le-Comte probably ignored a stop signal and hit another heading from Quievrain to Liege north of the Halle train station at about 8:30 a.m. local time, De Witte said, citing preliminary findings, news agency Belga reported. A similar rail crash killed eight near the Belgian town of Pecrot in March 2001. Belgian railroad company NMBS/SNCB doesn’t want to speculate about the cause of the crash and prefers to wait for the outcome of the judicial investigation, Jochem Goovaerts, a spokesman for the NMBS, said on Flemish VRT-Radio 1. Eurostar and Thalys high-speed rail services from Brussels to Paris and London have been suspended following the crash, the two international rail operators said on their Web sites. To contact the reporter on this story: John Martens in Brussels at jmartens1@bloomberg.net

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Greek Government Probe Uncovers `Long-Term Damage’ From Swaps Agreements

February 14, 2010

By Elisa Martinuzzi and Maria Petrakis Feb. 15 (Bloomberg) — A Greek government inquiry uncovered a series of swaps agreements with securities firms that may have allowed it to mask its growing debts. Greece used the swaps to defer interest repayments by several years, according to a Feb. 1 report commissioned by the Finance Ministry in Athens. The document didn’t identify the securities firms Greece used. The government turned to Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in 2002 to obtain $1 billion through a swap agreement, Christoforos Sardelis , head of Greece’s Public Debt Management Agency between 1999 and 2004, said in an interview last week. “While swaps should be strictly limited to those that lead to a permanent reduction in interest spending, some of these agreements have been made to move interest from the present year to the future, with long-term damage to the Greek state,” the Finance Ministry report said. The 106-page dossier is now being examined by lawmakers. European Union leaders last week ordered Greece to get its deficit under control and vowed “determined” action to staunch the worst crisis in the euro’s 11-year history. Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings are questioning Greece over its use of the swap agreements, said two people with direct knowledge of the situation, who declined to be identified because the talks are private. “Greece used accounting tricks to hide its deficit and this is a huge problem,” Wolfgang Gerke , president of the Bavarian Center of Finance in Munich and Honorary Professor at the European Business School, said in an interview. “The rating agencies are doing the right thing, but it may be too little too late. The EU slept through this.” Euro Criteria Lucas van Praag , a spokesman for New York-based Goldman Sachs, the most profitable securities firm in Wall Street history, didn’t respond to e-mails seeking comment. Greece, whose burgeoning budget deficit caused it to fail the criteria for joining the single European currency in 1999, joined the Euro in 2001. Member nations had to reduce their budget deficit to less than 3 percent of gross domestic product and trim national debt to less than 60 percent of GDP. Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou , who came to power in October after defeating two-term incumbent Kostas Karamanlis , more than tripled the 2009 deficit estimate to 12.7 percent. Greek officials last month pledged to provide more reliable statistics after the EU complained of “severe irregularities” in the nation’s economic figures. ‘Political Interference’ The Finance Ministry report blamed “political interference” for the collapse of credibility in Greece’s statistics. There were “serious weaknesses” in data collection, especially with spending figures, as information often came from second-hand sources, the report found. The Goldman Sachs transaction consisted of a cross-currency swap of about $10 billion of debt issued by Greece in dollars and yen, Sardelis said. That was swapped into euros using a historical exchange rate, a mechanism that implied a reduction in debt and generated about $1 billion of funding for that year, he said. Eurostat, the EU’s Luxembourg-based statistics office, and the rating companies were both aware of the plan, he said. Officials for Eurostat couldn’t be reached for comment. Officials for Fitch, Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s didn’t return calls seeking comment outside regular office hours yesterday. ‘Deal Restructured’ Sardelis said the agreement was restructured “a couple” of times while he was still in office. He left in 2004 and joined Banca IMI, the investment-banking unit of Italy’s Intesa Sanpaolo SpA’s. He said the fees, or the spread that Goldman Sachs was paid on the contract, were “reasonable.” The New York-based firm made about $300 million from the agreement, the New York Times reported Feb. 14. Goldman Sachs bankers including President Gary Cohn traveled to Athens in November to pitch a deal that would push debt from the country’s health-care services into the future, the newspaper reported, citing two people briefed on the meeting. Greece rejected the offer, the New York Times said. The government met with major international banks over the last month in order to explore options and discuss their involvement in financing Greek national debt, said an official at the Greek finance ministry who declined to be identified. Debt-financing operations are conducted transparently in order to be fully Eurostat-compliant, the official said. Goldman Earnings Goldman Sachs reported net income of $13.4 billion in 2009’s fiscal year, outpacing the $11.6 billion profit in 2007, its next-best year. The shares doubled last year to $168.84. S&P, Moody’s Investors Service and Fitch in December all cut Greece’s credit rating in December. The rating was lowered by one level to BBB+ from A- at S&P and the country’s debt was put on “credit-watch negative,” signaling the company may reduce it again. Fitch cut Greece’s rating one level to BBB+, from A-. Moody’s cut Greece to A2 from A1.

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Toyota Recalls Some Tacoma Pickups for Defect in Drive Shafts Made by Dana

February 12, 2010

By Angela Greiling Keane Feb. 13 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp. said it’s recalling a “limited number” of Tacoma pickups because of cracks in the drive-shaft components. The defect was recently caught during the manufacturing process before any reports of problems, said John Hanson , a spokesman for the Japanese automaker’s U.S. sales unit in Torrance, California. The parts supplier, Dana Holding Corp. , said the recall involves about 34,000 tube yokes that were also sold to Ford Motor Co. and Nissan Motor Co. The recall is the latest in a series for Toyota, the world’s largest automaker, which has sought to correct defects with about 8 million vehicles globally. It suspended sales this year of eight models in the U.S., including the top-selling Camry, after defects related to accelerator pedals. Dana sent the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration a notice Feb. 11 saying it would handle the recall after finding a defect in the manufacturing process for the part, which attaches to the end of the drive shaft and helps transfer torque. Dana hasn’t been made aware of any accidents related to the flaw, Chuck Hartlage , a spokesman for the Toledo, Ohio-based company, said in an e-mail. The recall involves “a very limited number of vehicles,” Hanson of Toyota said. “Many of the vehicles are still in marshaling yards and feeder lots,” Hanson said. Toyota also alerted NHTSA, and “we will be notifying owners on this,” he said. Wes Sherwood , a spokesman for Dearborn, Michigan-based Ford, and Fred Standish of Nissan North America didn’t immediately respond to telephone calls and e-mails seeking comment. Toyota’s American depositary receipts, each equal to two ordinary shares, have fallen 8.4 percent in New York Stock Exchange composite trading this year. To contact the reporter on this story: Angela Greiling Keane in Washington at agreilingkea@bloomberg.net .

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Bill Clinton Hospitalized in New York for Stent Implant After Chest Pains

February 11, 2010

By Nicholas Johnston Feb. 11 (Bloomberg) — Former U.S. President Bill Clinton was admitted to a New York hospital today after suffering chest pains and underwent a procedure to place two stents in one of his coronary arteries, a spokesman said. “President Clinton is in good spirits, and will continue to focus on the work of his foundation and Haiti’s relief and long-term recovery efforts,” Douglas Band, counselor to the former president, said in a statement. Clinton, 63, underwent quadruple bypass surgery in 2004 after complaining of chest pains and shortness of breath. After the surgery he stayed at New York- Presbyterian Hospital for about a week. Gloria Chin, a spokeswoman for New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center, said in a telephone interview that Clinton is at the facility. She referred further questions to the former president’s spokesman. Band said in the statement that Clinton went to the hospital after feeling discomfort and underwent the procedure after seeing his cardiologist. Doctors said it is relatively common for someone who has undergone bypass surgery to have a recurrence of chest pain and need stents implanted. Disease Returns “This is a very good example of what very typically happens with patients,” Steve Nissen , chairman of cardiology at the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio, said in an interview. “They get a period of often excellent results for some years, but the disease does come back.” Sunil Rao, an interventional cardiologist at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, North Carolina, said heart disease “is a progressive disease” that require lifetime treatment. “We can’t stop it, but we can slow it down through medication as well as risk factor modification,” Rao said. Clinton’s wife, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton , traveled to New York this evening after a meeting with President Barack Obama at the White House in preparation for a diplomatic trip to the Middle East. The meeting ended as scheduled and Hillary Clinton left for New York to see her husband, according to administration officials. Obama has been informed of the former president’s hospitalization, an official said. Former President Former President George W. Bush spoke to Clinton’s daughter, Chelsea, earlier today and “was glad to hear” that Clinton is doing well, David Sherzer, a spokesman for Bush, said. The two former presidents have been working together to raise money for relief efforts in Haiti. The procedure done on Clinton involved stents, which are tiny wire-mesh tubes used to prop open arteries after they’ve been cleared of fatty clogs by surgeons. Newer devices are coated with polymer and drugs to prevent tissue from growing inside the stent and re-blocking the artery, a main complication of previous models. Implanting stents typically takes less than an hour using a local anesthetic and patients typically leave the hospital within a day or two and resume normal activities within a week if the heart isn’t damaged, Nissen said today in an interview. One million Americans have the procedure each year, according to the National Institutes of Health. The $4.2 billion global market for stents is dominated by Natick, Massachusetts-based Boston Scientific Inc. , Medtronic Inc. , based in Minneapolis, Abbott Laboratories of Abbott Park, Illinois, and Johnson & Johnson , the world’s largest health products company, based in New Brunswick, New Jersey. Since leaving the presidency in 2000 after serving two terms, Clinton has worked on his presidential library and international disaster-relief efforts. The United Nations has named him international coordinator for humanitarian relief efforts in Haiti following the Jan. 12 earthquake that devastated the island nation. Clinton has an office in Harlem and he and Hillary Clinton have a home in Chappaqua, New York. To contact the reporters on this story: Nicholas Johnston in Washington at njohnston3@bloomberg.net ;

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China Indicts Four Rio Tinto Employees for Bribery After Seven-Month Probe

February 10, 2010

By Bloomberg News Feb. 11 (Bloomberg) — China indicted four employees of Rio Tinto Group , including the Australian head of its iron ore business in the country, charging them with “infringing” trade secrets and bribery after a seven-month inquiry. Prosecutors accused the four of “taking advantage of their position to seek profit for others, and asking for, or illegally accepting, huge amounts of money from Chinese steel enterprises,” a municipal court in Shanghai said yesterday in a statement reported by the official Xinhua news agency. Australia wants the matter resolved quickly, Financial Services Minister Chris Bowen said today. The indictments and a failed investment deal with Rio strained relations between Australia and its biggest trading partner and may add to the perception of risk of doing business in China. Google Inc., owner of the world’s most-popular search engine, said last month that cyber attacks from the Asian nation may prompt the closure of its local operations. “If people are trying to do business in China, it may well be perceived that there’s a bigger risk in doing that today than there was 12 months ago,” said Charles Kernot , a mining analyst at Evolution Securities Ltd. in London. “All mining companies will be more cautious.” Tao Wuping , who represents one of the Rio executives, Liu Caikui, said that as far as he was aware prosecutors were still reviewing the case. Zhang Peihong , a lawyer for Wang Yong said he hadn’t been informed of the indictments. Australian Stern Hu and Ge Minqiang are the two other detainees. “We would hope that this matter gets resolved as quickly as possible,” Bowen told Australian Broadcasting Corp. radio today. The government will ensure Hu gets assistance, he said. Iron Ore Talks The four were indicted in Shanghai and a criminal case will be heard by the city’s No.1 Intermediate People’s Court, Xinhua said, without giving a date for the hearing. They were formally arrested by the Shanghai Municipality Public Security Bureau on Aug. 11 after being detained in July. The indictments come as Chinese steelmakers, the biggest buyers of iron ore, begin talks with foreign suppliers to set contract prices for the year from April 1. Last year, talks with Vale SA, Rio, and BHP Billiton Ltd., which together supply two- thirds of the seaborne trade in the raw material, failed to reach agreement after China argued for a deeper cut than the 33 percent reduction accepted by mills in Japan and Korea. Deal Rebuffed Hu, a classically-trained violinist who chose his English first name after virtuoso Isaac Stern , according to a person familiar with the Rio executive, was head of Rio’s iron ore unit in China. Rio was the lead negotiator for producers in last year’s stalemated talks, the longest-running in their 40-year history. Relations between Rio and China were also strained last June when it rebuffed a $19.5 billion investment by state-owned Aluminum Corp. of China, its biggest shareholder, four months after agreeing to what would have been the nation’s largest overseas investment. “The formal charging of some of its Chinese operatives with alleged corrupt activity reminds me that China-Rio relations are still very strained post Rio-fleeing from Chinalco’s arms,” Charlie Aitken , director of Southern Cross Equities Ltd., said in a report today. Charges Downgraded China originally detained the four on suspicion of stealing state secrets, before downgrading the allegations in August, the same month that the Australian government acknowledged that the arrests and a visit to the country by Uighur leader Rebiya Kadeer, had frayed ties between the two nations. Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said a month later that relations were in “good working order” and in October Chinese Vice Premier Li Keqiang said his government is committed to a free- trade agreement with Australia. Two-way trade between China and Australia was worth A$83 billion ($73 billion) in fiscal 2009. Rio has about 30 percent of its assets in Australia and got about 19 percent of its sales from China in 2008. David Luff , a spokesman for Rio in Melbourne, declined to comment when contacted by phone today. A spokeswoman for Australia’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade in Canberra, who declined to be named in line with policy, said the government was unable to confirm the reports of Hu’s indictment. Transparency Report China’s anti-corruption agency last month pledged to target graft among top officials of state-owned enterprises after ministerial-level executives were brought down last year for bribery, the official China Daily reported last month. The country fell to 79th in Transparency International’s 2009 corruption perception index from 72 the previous year. Its population also considers corruption the biggest blot on its international image, the China Daily said Jan. 6, citing a survey by Horizon Research Consultancy Group. Hu, who studied history at Peking university, became an Australian citizen in the early 1990s after joining technology firm AWA Ltd. to run its Beijing office, The Australian newspaper reported July 15. Hu and his family moved to the beachside Sydney suburb of Manly in 1993 and he lived in the country for about eight months, the report said. To contact the reporter on this story: Alastair Reed in Johannesburg at areed12@bloomberg.net

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MetLife Said to Weigh Using $8 Billion of Stock to Fund AIG Alico Buyout

February 9, 2010

By Emre Peker and Zachary R. Mider Feb. 9 (Bloomberg) — MetLife Inc. may use stock to fund more than half of the planned $15 billion purchase of an American International Group Inc. life insurance unit, said three people with knowledge of the matter. MetLife plans to pay AIG about $8 billion in stock and the rest in cash for American Life Insurance Co., said the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the talks are private. Some of the cash may come from a $5 billion bridge loan from banks, the people said. AIG and MetLife, both based in New York, may reach an agreement over the sale as soon as Feb. 11, the people said. Mark Herr , a spokesman for AIG, declined to comment. MetLife’s Christopher Breslin declined to comment. To contact the reporters on this story: Zachary R. Mider in New York at zmider1@bloomberg.net ; Emre Peker in New York at epeker2@bloomberg.net .

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Mid-Atlantic States Plow Roads, Runways, Rail Lines, Brace for More Snow

February 8, 2010

By Vincent Del Giudice and Dan Hart Feb. 8 (Bloomberg) — U.S. government offices were closed today as Washington, D.C., and the mid-Atlantic region attempted to dig out from a weekend blizzard and braced for another storm expected in the coming days. The storm of 2010 that was described by some forecasters as “epic” left almost 40 inches of snow in some places. The blizzard led to thousands of power outages and shut down air traffic along the mid-Atlantic seaboard. The National Weather Service said an encore storm was forming that may unleash another carpet of snow and ice during the next 48 to 72 hours. State and municipal officials told residents to think twice about traveling while cities dug out from the initial onslaught. Schools in the Washington area canceled classes for today. “People need to be very careful,” said Beverley K. Swaim- Staley , Maryland’s secretary of transportation, in an interview. “It was a very heavy snow.” As far as the next storm, she said, “We’re doing everything we can to get ready. Obviously, three feet of snow won’t melt by then.” The Virginia Railway Express, a commuter line connecting Washington to Manassas, Virginia, and Fredericksburg, Virginia, announced on its Web site it planned to suspend operations today because of power outages. ‘Amazing’ The weather service in Sterling, Virginia, issued a winter storm watch for tomorrow for a system that “had potential for 5 or more inches of snow” for the region. The weather service placed the chance of precipitation at 90 percent by tomorrow night. Over the weekend, Elkridge, Maryland, south of Baltimore, recorded 38.3 inches (97 centimeters) of snow, according to the National Weather Service. Baltimore’s airport had 24.8 inches, while Washington’s Reagan National had 17.8 inches, its second- biggest snowfall total. Philadelphia registered 28.5 inches, its second-biggest snowfall also. In Virginia, Howellsville, west of Washington, reported 37 inches of snow. “This was an epic storm,” said Andrew Ulrich , a meteorologist for AccuWeather.com Inc. in State College, Pennsylvania. “The sheer amount of snow was amazing.” Two men died assisting at the scene on an accident on Interstate 81 in Virginia on Feb. 5. Forecasters compared the blizzard to the “Knickerbocker Storm of 1922” that caused a deadly roof collapse at a Washington theater called the Knickerbocker. Ninety-eight people died in that catastrophe and 133 others were injured. Few Planes, Trains Yesterday, airports across the region struggled to dig out from the storm, and Washington Reagan, across the Potomac River from Washington, was closed for a second day. The other airports in the Washington region resumed a very limited schedule. Subway systems in Washington and Baltimore operated limited service, and utility crews worked to restore service to thousands of customers. Bus service was suspended in Washington and its suburbs, Baltimore and its suburbs, and parts of Delaware. In Pennsylvania, the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transporation Authority reported delays yesterday on its bus system due to “icy conditions,” according to the SEPTA web site. Philadelphia International Airport, meantime, reported some flight cancellations. The blizzard also caused the Senate to postpone a vote. Jim Manley , a spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid , Democrat of Nevada, said the Senate would wait until tomorrow to consider the nomination of Craig Becker to the National Labor Relations Board. Costly The snow removal efforts strained state and local government coffers. Before the weekend, Maryland spent $50 million on snow removal this season. A storm in December cost $27 million of that and this weekend’s storm will likely cost more than that, Swaim-Staley said. The state has exhausted its reserve fund and will probably seek state assistance, she said. Virginia had already spent the $79 million it budgeted for this year for snow removal, and paid for the latest storm from a $25 million reserve fund. Karen Le Blanc, a spokeswoman for the District of Columbia said the city government was “probably over” its $6.2 million budget for snow removal. To contact the reporter on this story: Vincent Del Giudice in Washington at vdelgiudice@bloomberg.net . Dan Hart in Washington at dahart@bloomberg.net .

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Toyota Tells U.S. Dealers to Expect Update This Week on Prius Brake Plan

February 7, 2010

By Alan Ohnsman Feb. 7 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp. , grappling with record U.S. recalls, said it told U.S. dealers to expect an update early this week on steps the company plans to take to address complaints over brakes on the 2010 model Prius hybrid. “We notified dealers in a short letter yesterday that we believe we’ll have more specific information on our plans for Prius next week,” John Hanson , a spokesman for Toyota’s U.S. sales unit, said yesterday. “We know dealers have customers coming to them who are concerned and we’re trying to give them as much information as we can, as fast as we can.” Toyota, the world’s largest automaker, didn’t tell dealers it will make a formal “announcement” on a fix for Prius and hasn’t yet determined whether a recall is necessary, he said. Should the Toyota City, Japan-based company recall the latest version of Prius, the world’s best-selling hybrid car, it would add to the perception of quality problems at Toyota. The company has already recalled 5.6 million cars and light trucks in the U.S. since November to correct flaws linked to unintended acceleration, an issue Toyota says isn’t connected to Prius brakes. Japan’s Nikkei newswire reported that Toyota would recall 270,000 Priuses in Japan and the U.S. to correct software in the braking system. Toyota hasn’t confirmed that report. Complaints in U.S. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said it has 124 complaints from U.S. drivers about Prius brakes. Toyota has said it’s investigating reports that Prius owners driving at low speeds on bumpy or icy roads have experienced moments in which the car continues to coast for about a second after the brakes are applied because of the anti-lock brake system. NHTSA isn’t aware of a plan by Toyota to announce a fix for brakes on Prius hybrids this week, Olivia Alair , a spokeswoman for the agency, said in an e-mailed message. The company said last week it altered software on Priuses built in Japan in January to correct the issue. A class action suit against the automaker was filed in Canada Feb. 5 over alleged defects in the Prius braking system. Toyota’s U.S. sales unit is based in Torrance, California. To contact the reporters on this story: Alan Ohnsman in Los Angeles at aohnsman@bloomberg.net

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JPMorgan Said to Raise Almost $700 Million to Equip Digital Movie Theaters

February 6, 2010

By Michael White Feb. 6 (Bloomberg) — JPMorgan Chase & Co. raised almost $700 million to equip the three biggest U.S. theater chains with digital screens and projectors that can show 3-D movies, according to a person with knowledge of the plan. Digital Cinema Implementation Partners, a collaboration between Regal Entertainment Group , AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. and Cinemark Holdings Inc. , is likely to announce the funding in about two weeks, said the person, who requested anonymity because the details are private. The financing, delayed since 2008 because of the credit crunch, will speed theater conversions as Hollywood studios increase production of 3-D films, which command premium ticket prices. News Corp. ’s “Avatar” has taken in $2.1 billion, the most of any picture, since it opened Dec. 18, according to researcher Box Office Mojo. Brian Marchiony , a spokesman for New York-based JPMorgan, declined to comment. Dick Westerling , a spokesman for Nashville, Tennessee-based Regal, Robert Copple , a spokesman for Plano, Texas-based Cinemark, and Sun Dee Larson, a spokeswoman for AMC, didn’t immediately return calls seeking comment after business hours. Distributing movies digitally allows studios to save money on printing shipping reels. It also enables theaters to adjust lineups more quickly based on demand. Studios will contribute funds to repaying the financing based on the number of digital films shown. 3-D Films The equipment can also be upgraded to show 3-D films, which Hollywood studios are relying on to bolster revenue as DVD sales decline. At least 16 pictures are planned this year, including DreamWorks Animation SKG’s “How to Train Your Dragon,” according to researcher Hollywood.com Box-Office. The funding will supply equipment for 12,000 screens and is awaiting sign-off by studios, the Los Angeles Times reported yesterday. DCIP resumed its effort to raise the money last year after putting it on hold amid the credit crisis. The group was seeking $525 million in senior debt and $200 million in equity through its jointly owned Digital Cinema Implementation Partners , two people with knowledge of the situation said in September. The plans were scaled back from August 2008, when DCIP Chief Executive Officer Travis Reid said the group aimed to raise $1 billion to refit more than 14,000 U.S. and Canadian theaters. Regal fell 25 cents to $14.70 yesterday in New York Stock Exchange composite trading . Cinemark was little changed at $14.33. Closely held AMC is based in Kansas City, Missouri. To contact the reporter on this story: Michael White in Los Angeles at mwhite8@bloomberg.net .

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Toyota Tells U.S. Dealers to Expect Update Next Week on Prius Brake Plan

February 6, 2010

By Alan Ohnsman Feb. 6 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp. , grappling with record U.S. recalls, said it told U.S. dealers to expect an update early next week on steps the company plans to take to address complaints over brakes on the 2010 model Prius hybrid. “We notified dealers in a short letter yesterday that we believe we’ll have more specific information on our plans for Prius next week,” said John Hanson , a spokesman for Toyota’s U.S. sales unit. “We know dealers have customers coming to them who are concerned and we’re trying to give them as much information as we can, as fast as we can.” Toyota, the world’s largest automaker, didn’t tell dealers it will make a formal “announcement” on a fix for Prius and hasn’t yet determined whether a recall is necessary, he said. Should the Toyota City, Japan-based company recall the latest version of Prius, the world’s best-selling hybrid car, it would add to the perception of quality problems at Toyota. The company has already recalled 5.6 million cars and light trucks in the U.S. since November to correct flaws linked to unintended acceleration, an issue Toyota says isn’t connected to Prius brakes. Japan’s Nikkei newswire reported last week that Toyota would recall 270,000 Priuses in Japan and the U.S. to correct software in the braking system. Toyota hasn’t confirmed that report. Complaints in U.S. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said it has 124 complaints from U.S. drivers about Prius brakes. Toyota has said it’s investigating reports that Prius owners driving at low speeds on bumpy or icy roads have experienced moments in which the car continues to coast for about a second after the brakes are applied because of the anti-lock brake system. NHTSA isn’t aware of a plan by Toyota to announce a fix for brakes on Prius hybrids next week, Olivia Alair , a spokeswoman for the agency, said in an e-mailed message. The company said this week it altered software on Priuses built in Japan last month to correct the issue. A class action suit against the automaker was filed in Canada yesterday over alleged defects in the Prius braking system. Toyota’s U.S. sales unit is based in Torrance, California. To contact the reporters on this story: Alan Ohnsman in Los Angeles at aohnsman@bloomberg.net

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Sanofi Speeds Swine Flu Vaccine Expirations to Mid-February After Recall

February 5, 2010

By Tom Randall Feb. 5 (Bloomberg) — Sanofi-Aventis SA shortened the expiration of its 12 million pre-filled swine flu shots by as much as 16 months to ensure the potency of the vaccine doesn’t decline. The shots should be administered by Feb. 15, according to a Web site run by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The vaccines previously had expiration dates that varied from March to June 2011. Paris-based Sanofi in December recalled 800,000 doses of the shot for H1N1 influenza, known as swine flu, and AstraZeneca Plc withdrew 4.7 million spray vaccines, after tests showed the potency was too low. Flu rates in the U.S. have declined since peaking in late October, and the H1N1 virus is no longer widespread in any state, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported today. More than 70 million people have received a swine flu vaccine, the Atlanta-based CDC said. The December recalls were made after routine tests showed declining potency in some batches. “The FDA and the manufacturers are really looking into this,” Anne Schuchat , head of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases at the CDC, said today during a conference call. The declining potency of pre-filled syringes is “a special focus of attention to understand mechanically what may have been going on and to learn from that.” U.S. Vaccines The shortened expiration date only affects shots in the U.S., said Len Lavenda , a spokesman for Sanofi in Swiftwater, Pennsylvania, in a telephone interview. The shots don’t affect vaccine the company is donating to the Geneva-based World Health Organization because the donated shots are in multidose vials, not pre-filled syringes, he said. Most of the shots were shipped early in the season, and the number of unused doses that are affected by the shortened shelf life is low, said Richard Quartarone, a spokesman for the CDC, in an e-mail. All pre-filled syringes “should now be administered by Feb. 15, 2010, regardless of the expiration imprinted on the package,” according to the U.S. Web site. Sanofi’s decreased vaccine potency may have been due to the key ingredient, antigen, clinging to the wall of the syringe over time, Schuchat said after the December recall. Different Doses Multidose vials, the most common form of the vaccine, aren’t affected by the expiration change. The single-dose syringes are sometimes used for convenience and because they don’t require thimerosal, a preservative that has been shown to be safe in studies though remains controversial. Sanofi shares declined 1.74 Euros, or 3.3 percent, to close at 51.68 in Paris trading . Swine flu continues to circulate in the U.S., though at rates below average for seasonal flu in previous years, the CDC’s Schuchat said. Pneumonia and flu deaths remain at an epidemic level, above average for the season, she said. “We aren’t seeing signs of a major increase in H1N1, but we are seeing persistent transmission,” Schuchat said today. “It’s really easy to be vaccinated now, and we hope that people will take advantage of that.” The U.S. government ordered 229 million doses of antigen. About 155 million doses have been made available in the U.S., and 124 million doses have shipped throughout the country, Schuchat said. To contact the reporters on this story: Tom Randall in New York at trandall6@bloomberg.net

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John Paulson Gold Fund Is Said to Decline 14% in January, Its First Month

February 5, 2010

By Katherine Burton Feb. 5 (Bloomberg) — Hedge-fund billionaire John Paulson ’s gold fund lost 14 percent in January, its first month of operation, two investors said. The fund invests in mining companies and bullion-related derivatives, according to the investors, who asked not to be named because the fund is private. Paulson’s $32 billion Paulson & Co., based in New York, bought gold companies in its other funds as well as bullion rose about 24 percent in 2009. Gold futures fell to a three-month low of $1,044.50 in New York today as the dollar’s rally reduced demand for the precious metal as an alternative investment. Paulson, 54, is the largest investor in the fund with a $250 million personal stake, the people said. He started the fund as a long-term bet that gold will rise. Investors can’t exit the fund for three years. Paulson earned an estimated $2 billion in 2008, according to Institutional Investor’s Alpha Magazine. His Credit Opportunities Fund soared almost sixfold in 2007 on bets that subprime mortgages, or loans made to homeowners with bad credit, would plummet. Armel Leslie , a spokesman for the firm, declined to comment. To contact the reporter on this story: Katherine Burton in New York at kburton@bloomberg.net

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John Paulson Gold Fund Is Said to Decline 14% in January, Its First Month

February 5, 2010

By Katherine Burton Feb. 5 (Bloomberg) — Hedge-fund billionaire John Paulson ’s gold fund lost 14 percent in January, its first month of operation, two investors said. The fund invests in mining companies and bullion-related derivatives, according to the investors, who asked not to be named because the fund is private. Paulson’s $32 billion Paulson & Co., based in New York, bought gold companies in its other funds as well as bullion rose about 24 percent in 2009. Gold futures fell to a three-month low of $1,044.50 in New York today as the dollar’s rally reduced demand for the precious metal as an alternative investment. Paulson, 54, is the largest investor in the fund with a $250 million personal stake, the people said. He started the fund as a long-term bet that gold will rise. Investors can’t exit the fund for three years. Paulson earned an estimated $2 billion in 2008, according to Institutional Investor’s Alpha Magazine. His Credit Opportunities Fund soared almost sixfold in 2007 on bets that subprime mortgages, or loans made to homeowners with bad credit, would plummet. Armel Leslie , a spokesman for the firm, declined to comment. To contact the reporter on this story: Katherine Burton in New York at kburton@bloomberg.net

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Bank of America E-Mails Show Board Thought Lehman, Not Merrill, Was Target

February 5, 2010

By Linda Sandler Feb. 5 (Bloomberg) — When Bank of America Corp. ’s board met to approve the acquisition of an investment bank on Sept. 15, 2008, members thought they were going to buy Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. , not Merrill Lynch & Co., according to New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo . The bank bought Merrill after examining its books for just 25 hours, Cuomo claimed. Shareholders approved the deal on Dec. 5, 2008. The acquisition closed Jan. 1, 2009, after Merrill losses had increased by billions of dollars, a change the bank didn’t disclose before the shareholder vote, Cuomo said. “It’s the way we approved acquisitions that ticks me off the most!!!” director Chad Gifford later wrote in an e-mail about the last-minute switch, according to a securities-fraud complaint Cuomo filed yesterday in state court in New York. Lehman filed for bankruptcy on Sept. 15, 2008. Cuomo’s complaint was filed against Bank of America, former Chief Executive Officer Kenneth Lewis and ex-Chief Financial Officer Joe Price over their handling of the Merrill deal. E-mails and written notes that were gathered by Cuomo for his investigation of the matter show personal reactions of executives as they learned of Merrill’s rising losses, which reached $16 billion before taxes by December 2008. They also show Merrill kept Price informed of the losses as they grew, yet he resisted pressure from his lawyers to disclose them to shareholders. ‘Read and Weep’ “Read and weep,” Bank of America accounting officer Neil Cotty wrote Price on Nov. 4, 2008, when Merrill’s financial reporting unit forwarded preliminary October results with a loss of $6 billion. The merger documents had already gone out to shareholders. Five days later, the October loss was put at $7.5 billion before taxes. When Price asked in November for a review of whether the losses — then $5 billion after taxes — should be disclosed to shareholders, his general counsel Timothy Mayopoulos said they should. An e-mail from Eric Roth , a partner at the bank’s outside law firm, Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, sought research within his firm on “the duty to disclose,” according to the lawsuit. Roth’s notes from a call with Wachtell Lipton partner Warren Stern say, “duty to bring to shareholders all info material to vote.” The firm told the bank it should disclose the losses, Cuomo claims. The law firm was “marginalized” after that by the bank, which chose not to disclose the losses, Cuomo claimed. Mayopoulos was later fired by Price and replaced by Brian Moynihan , who later became CEO, Cuomo said. ‘Fair Reading’ “We believe a fair reading of all the evidence does not support these charges,” Robert Stickler , a spokesman for the Charlotte, North Carolina-based bank, said yesterday in a phone interview. “The SEC had access to all of the evidence and concluded there was no basis to charge any individuals nor to file a charge of fraud.” Lawyers for Lewis and Price denied wrongdoing. Wachtell declined to comment in a statement. When Bank of America prepared to disclose more write-downs after the merger in a Jan. 16, 2009, release, Gifford and another director, Thomas May, swapped e-mails on the belated notice to shareholders, according to Cuomo’s filing. “Unfortunately it’s screw the shareholders!!” Gifford wrote. May wrote back, warning about potentially embarrassing e-mails: “No trail.” The ‘Downside’ Cotty warned Price in December e-mails that Merrill’s evaluation of its securities might be too optimistic, so there may be “downside” in its estimated results. Lewis by then was worried about his job, according to an e-mail from Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Senior Vice President Mac Alfriend that is cited by Cuomo. Lewis “is worried about stockholder lawsuits; knows they did not do a good job of due diligence and the issues facing the company are finally hitting home and he is worried about his own job after cutting loose lots of very good people,” Alfriend wrote on Dec. 23. Lewis didn’t want to tell shareholders of the pending government bailout and asked Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke “whether he could use as a defense” that the government didn’t want him to disclose it, according to an e-mail from Bernanke. “I said no,” Bernanke responded to Lewis. The case is People of State of New York v. Bank of America, State Supreme Court (Manhattan). To contact the reporter on this story: Linda Sandler in New York at lsandler@bloomberg.net .

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AIG’s Udvar-Hazy Retires as Plane-Leasing CEO Amid Effort to Sell Business

February 5, 2010

By Susanna Ray Feb. 5 (Bloomberg) — American International Group Inc .’s Steven Udvar-Hazy stepped down as chief executive officer of the bailed-out insurer’s plane-leasing unit he founded 37 years ago as the parent company prepares to sell jets to help repay debt. John Plueger , president and chief operating officer, will take over today as acting CEO of International Lease Finance Corp. , AIG said in a statement last night. Udvar-Hazy, who sold the company to AIG in 1990, gave up the chairmanship of the unit to AIG board member Douglas Steenland in December. ILFC, based in Los Angeles, has been unable to tap its usual sources of funding since the insurer’s bailout, forcing AIG to prop up the unit with a $1.7 billion credit line in March and $2 billion in October. Udvar-Hazy was in talks to buy as much as a $4.5 billion chunk of ILFC’s fleet to start a new firm, people familiar with the matter said in October. “We anticipate selling some ILFC assets in the future,” AIG CEO Robert H. Benmosche said in the statement. “We continue to review other options, including accessing the capital markets through secured debt financing.” Udvar-Hazy, 63, and Plueger, 55, declined to comment. Mark Herr , a spokesman for New York-based AIG, also wouldn’t discuss the matter. Private-equity firms Onex Corp. and Greenbriar Equity Group LLC backed Udvar-Hazy in his bid to start a new company, the people said. ILFC has about 1,000 aircraft in its fleet valued at more than $44 billion. An Outsider “Maybe Steve has to actually step out and become an outsider before he can step back in to what’s a new, recast organization,” said George Hamlin , president of Fairfax, Virginia-based Hamlin Transportation Consulting. “There’s a very strong chance that Steve will stay in the business, but maybe he’s got something else entirely in his mind.” AIG is selling assets to repay a $182.3 billion government rescue. The company has struck deals to raise more than $12 billion, divesting a U.S. auto insurer, an equipment guarantor and a Japanese office tower. MetLife Inc., the biggest U.S. life insurer, is in talks to buy a non-U.S. life unit from AIG. ILFC, the biggest customer for both Boeing Co. and Airbus SAS , has more than $4 billion of debt maturing in the first nine months of 2010. It was cut to the lowest investment-grade level by Standard & Poor’s on Jan. 25 on the prospect the insurer may take “several years” to sell the business. Moody’s Investors Service cut the company to junk in December on concern that AIG may cut off funding this year. What’s Next? “The factors that were beating up most of ILFC’s portfolio were taking place with or without him,” said Richard Aboulafia , an analyst at the Teal Group, a Fairfax, Virginia-based aviation consulting firm. “What he does next will have an impact on perceptions of ILFC’s value.” The uncertainty around ILFC’s ownership and financing prevented the company from placing any orders last year and weighed on sales at Airbus and Boeing. In prior slumps in air travel, leasing companies increased their pace of buying as airlines scaled back. As of Sept. 30 , ILFC had contracts to buy 125 aircraft from the two planemakers through 2019 with a purchase price of $14 billion. The company had about $31 billion in total debt at the end of the third quarter. Plueger has worked at ILFC for 23 years and has been president and COO since 1995, responsible for worldwide sales and marketing efforts and relationships with the manufacturers, AIG said. Steenland, who will remain non-executive chairman, was CEO of Northwest Airlines Inc. until the carrier was bought by Delta Air Lines Inc. in October 2008, and became a director of AIG in June 2009. Udvar-Hazy is among more than 50 AIG managers to leave after the 2008 bailout. Edmund Tse stepped down in 2009 as a senior vice chairman after 48 years with the firm. Matthew Winter was named by Allstate Corp. in October to run its life insurance business after being AIG’s vice chairman of transition planning and administration. Kevin Kelley left AIG in 2008 to become CEO of Ironshore Inc. To contact the reporter on this story: Susanna Ray in Seattle at sray7@bloomberg.net

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Republican Brown Will Be Cleared for Senate Swearing-In Ceremony Tomorrow

February 3, 2010

By Laura Litvan and Heidi Przybyla Feb. 3 (Bloomberg) — U.S. Senator-elect Scott Brown , a Republican who won the seat held by late Edward M. Kennedy , will be certified tomorrow as winner of the Jan. 19 election so he can be sworn in later in the day. Brown had been scheduled to be sworn in next week. His lawyer sent a letter to Massachusetts officials saying he wanted the election results to be certified “without delay” so he could enter the Senate tomorrow afternoon. Brown’s victory ends Senate Democrats’ 60-seat supermajority that allowed them to halt Republican stalling tactics on legislation. “While Senator-elect Brown had tentatively planned to be sworn into office on Feb. 11, he has been advised that there are a number of votes scheduled prior to that date,” wrote his attorney, Daniel Winslow . “For that reason, he wants certification to occur immediately.” Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick’s spokesman, Kyle Sullivan, said in a statement that officials will certify the election results tomorrow morning. A spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid , a Nevada Democrat, said Reid would be willing to comply with Brown’s wishes to move up his swearing-in ceremony. “Once we have his certificate, there is no reason why he can’t be sworn in tomorrow afternoon — earlier than he had previously suggested,” said Jim Manley , a spokesman for Reid. Brown’s win over once-favored Democratic state Attorney General Martha Coakley altered the political landscape and is imperiling an overhaul of health-care legislation that was President Barack Obama’s top domestic priority and was a decades-long goal for Kennedy. Political Divide The race came to exemplify the nation’s political divide over health care, taxes and the role of government. It also provided an early glimpse of the potential for Republican momentum heading into this year’s midterm congressional elections. Brown, 50, a previously little-known state senator, cast himself as an independent voice to help thwart Obama’s health- care plan and keep a check on Democrats in Congress. Democratic leaders in both chambers now are turning their agendas away from health care to job-creation. Kennedy, 77, died Aug. 25 after a 15-month battle with brain cancer. Brown will serve the rest of Kennedy’s term, ending in January 2013. He will replace Paul Kirk , a Kennedy friend and former head of the Democratic National Committee who was appointed by Patrick Sept . 24 to fill the seat temporarily. To contact the reporters on this story: Laura Litvan in Washington at and Heidi Przybyla in Washington at hprzybyla@bloomberg.netlitvan @bloomberg.net and

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Goldman May Lose Record Profit as Bid-Ask Spread Shrinks: Chart of the Day

February 3, 2010

By Bryan Keogh and John Detrixhe Feb. 3 (Bloomberg) — Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. will find it tough to reproduce last year’s record trading revenue as the difference between bid and offer prices in credit markets narrows to the tightest in almost 18 months. The CHART OF THE DAY shows how the gap between prices at which traders offer to buy and sell credit-default swaps on North American companies has shrunk to 6.1 basis points, from as high as 20.4 in October 2008 and 16.3 in March. Historically wide spreads on everything from derivatives to bonds, representing fees earned per trade, helped fuel the recovery in bank earnings. “It’s much tougher to earn those” profits now, said Adolfo Laurenti , deputy chief economist at Mesirow Financial Inc. in Chicago. “The more efficient the market is, the narrower the spread is supposed to be.” Goldman Sachs’s revenue from fixed-income, currencies and commodities trading surged to $23.3 billion in 2009, while JPMorgan posted fixed-income markets revenue of $17.6 billion. The return to pre-crisis spreads may reduce the industry’s profitability at the same time regulators are threatening to curb risk taking. Justin Perras , a spokesman for JPMorgan, and Goldman Sachs spokesman Michael DuVally , both in New York, declined to comment. Bid-ask spreads on the 125 companies that are part of the Markit CDX North America Investment Grade Index Series 13, a benchmark for the credit-default swaps market, averaged 6.3 basis points this year, compared with 10.4 in all of 2009 and 9.7 in 2008, CMA data show. The spread averaged 4.2 basis points in 2007. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point. Credit-default swaps are derivatives, contracts with values derived from assets or events, including stocks, bonds, commodities, currencies, interest rates or the weather. Banks, hedge funds and insurance companies use the swaps to insure bonds and loans against default or to speculate on the creditworthiness of countries and companies. (To save a copy of the chart, click here.) To contact the reporters on this story: Bryan Keogh in New York at bkeogh4@bloomberg.net ; John Detrixhe in New York at jdetrixhe1@bloomberg.net

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Spain’s Tax-Dodging Landlords, Tenants Adding to Country’s Burgeoning Debt

February 3, 2010

By Sharon Smyth Feb. 3 (Bloomberg) — More than half of Spain’s landlords are dodging taxes as the rental market expands, depriving the financially strapped government of more revenue each year. Owners are asking for payment in cash from tenants to avoid tax on 2.5 billion euros ($3.5 billion) of earnings annually, the Gestha union of tax inspectors estimates. An increase in rental properties nationwide hasn’t generated any more tax revenue. The Spanish government, seeking to pull the country out of its deepest recession in 60 years, needs all the money it can get right now. The slump was triggered by a crash in the housing market and has left Spain with the highest budget deficit since at least 1980. Taxes go unpaid on income equal to about a quarter of gross domestic product, Gestha estimates. “The deep economic crisis in which the country is submerged is once again making the hidden economy flourish,” said Juan Jose Figares , chief analyst at Link Securities in Madrid. “The government will be compelled to clamp down on rent fraud.” A drop in house prices starting in the second quarter of 2008 has forced many people who bought homes as investments to seek tenants for their properties rather than selling at a loss. At the same time, more Spaniards are trying to lease homes after they were priced out of the market in the years before the crash, making it easier for landlords to strike deals that don’t involve the taxman. The number of properties for rent increased 18 percent to 2.2 million units in 2008, according to data from Spain’s Housing Ministry. Rental income declared by landlords rose by just 0.1 percent over the same period, a report on the Web site of Spain’s tax office shows. Room to Grow The rental market has a lot of room to grow. At 13 percent, the proportion of renters to homeowners in Spain is still low compared with other European countries, where 40 percent to 60 percent of housing is rented, according to Madrid-based property consultant Aguirre Newman . Around 65 percent of Spaniards aged 25 to 29 live with their parents, compared with about 22 percent in France and the U.K., economic research institute Fedea estimates. “During the housing boom, the state was earning so much from home sales that it wasn’t worth chasing the odd landlord,” said Fernando Encinar, co-founder of Idealista.com , Spain’s largest real estate Web site. “Now, with the economic crisis, the government really does need the money and will make efforts to prosecute tax dodgers.” Easy to Dodge Encinar, whose company lists 360,000 properties for rent and purchase, said Gestha’s estimate that 54 percent of landlords are ducking taxes “falls short of the true figure, which is set to grow further.” The penalty for avoiding tax on rent is a fine equivalent to 150 percent of the unpaid amount, according to the Spanish tax office. The tax also must be repaid. There is no punishment for the tenant. The penalty is almost never applied because tax dodgers are not being investigated, Gestha General Secretary Jose Maria Mollinedo said. “As both the landlord and the tenant make an agreement not to declare tax or their residency, there is absolutely no way to prove that tax fraud is taking place and therefore no non- declaring landlords are brought to book,” Mollinedo said. A tax break adopted in 2008 accounts for part of the difference between rising rentals and the lack of tax revenue growth. It gives landlords a 100 percent tax break if they rent to tenants who are under 35, according to a spokesman for Spain’s tax office who declined to be identified by name, citing government policy. He didn’t provide information on how many landlords claimed the tax break. Weak Incentive The incentive makes little difference because most leaseholders are over 35 and landlords worry that the break will be repealed in a couple of years, after they’re all registered with the state, Mollinedo said. Spain can ill afford to lose revenue it should be collecting. The country went from a record budget surplus equal to 2 percent of GDP in 2006 to a deficit equal to 11.4 percent last year, according to the European Commission. The debt burden is forecast to rise to 66 percent of GDP next year from 36 percent before the crisis in 2007, the commission said. Sellers pay 18 percent capital gains tax in Spain on any profit made from home sales. There were 106,273 transactions in the third quarter of 2009, according to the most recently published data from the housing ministry. That was 14 percent lower than a year earlier and 58 percent less than the market’s peak in the second quarter of 2006. Values decreased much as 11 percent last year, Idealista.com said. Tip of the Iceberg Rent fraud is just the tip of the iceberg, with Spaniards avoiding tax on income of 240 billion euros, equivalent to 23 percent of the economy, according to Gestha. If Spain could reduce that figure 13 percent, the country generate another 25 billion euros of tax revenue annually, it said. Tenants, happy to find a place at all, aren’t likely to turn into whistleblowers. While rents fell 8.4 percent in Madrid and 12 percent in Barcelona during the first half of 2009, increases over the previous five years continue to squeeze budgets. Rent levels climbed 28 percent in the capital and 56 percent in Barcelona in the five-year period. Ruben Gonzalez, a 33-year-old Madrid resident, said he received 120 calls in four hours after placing an advertisement in Idealista.com for a 2-bedroom apartment on behalf of his current landlord. Then he turned his cell phone off. Gonzalez showed the first 30 callers around the 60-square- meter (645-square-foot) city center apartment, which has a broken refrigerator and faulty boiler, rising damp and peeling paint. “‘Everyone was fighting over the place because its better than a lot of what is out there and the owner is legal and insists on a contract.” Gonzalez said. “One couple even offered to pay more than the asking price and another offered a cash bribe to put them at the top of the list.” To contact the reporters on this story: Sharon Smyth in Madrid at ssmyth2@bloomberg.net .

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Lockheed to Lose $614 Million Performance Fee on F-35 Program, Gates Says

February 1, 2010

By Viola Gienger and Gopal Ratnam Feb. 1 (Bloomberg) — Defense Secretary Robert Gates said he’ll withhold $614 million of Lockheed Martin Corp.’s fees on the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter program and change the project’s leader at the Pentagon after performance targets were missed. “A number of key goals and benchmarks were not met,” Gates said today at a news conference on the 2011 budget. “As a result, I will withhold $614 million in performance fees from the lead contractor, since the taxpayer should not have to bear the entire burden of getting the JSF program back on track.” Lockheed agrees with the assessment, he said. Gates’s recommendation comes five months after he visited Lockheed’s Joint Strike Fighter plant in Fort Worth, Texas, and said the “highest-risk elements of the program are behind us.” Asked how his assessment today differed from last year, Gates said, “It was clear there were more problems than we were aware of when I visited Fort Worth.” The Pentagon deployed an independent assessment team to examine the progress of the plane, which costs $298 billion and is its largest weapons program. The planes’ testing and development has been delayed, and the Pentagon is proposing shifting about $2.8 billion from production to continue development. John Kent , a spokesman for Lockheed, said he didn’t have an immediate response. Lockheed rose 4 cents to $74.56 at 2:56 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading . The shares dropped 10 percent in 2009. Pentagon Changes Gates said Marine Corps Major General David Heinz , the program manager on the Joint Strike Fighter, will be replaced with a senior officer holding the rank of a Lieutenant General or an equivalent position. In the budget for the fiscal year starting Oct. 1, which was presented to Congress today, the Pentagon seeks $11.4 billion for the program, $1.8 billion more than Congress approved this year. The total includes research, procurement and spare parts. The proposed budget includes $8.4 billion to buy 43 airplanes. The Pentagon said today the current system design and development phase will be extended one year with completion in October 2015. The cost forecasts prepared by the Joint Estimating Team are accurate and there are no “insurmountable problems” with the program, Gates said. “We are now in a position to move forward in a realistic way,” he said. “But one cannot absorb the additional costs we have in this program and the delays without people being held accountable.” Gates said he appreciates Lockheed’s “responsiveness and commitment to find the best solution.” To contact the reporters on this story: Viola Gienger in New Delhi via vgienger@bloomberg.net ; Gopal Ratnam in Washington at gratnam1@bloomberg.net .

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