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Boeing To Cut 510 Jobs

by on June 4, 2011

Huffington Post…

(Reuters) – Boeing Co (BA.N) will lay off about 510 employees in its Space Exploration division as the United States’ space shuttle program draws to a close. There will no material impact on the company as a result of the job cuts, a spokesman for Boeing’s Space Exploration division told Reuters. The last workday for workers is scheduled to be August 5, pending completion of the final shuttle mission, the company said in a statement. The United States is retiring its three-ship fleet due to high operating costs and to free up funds to develop new spacecraft that can travel beyond the space station’s 220-mile-high (346-km-high) orbit. Earlier this week, space shuttle Endeavour touched down at its Florida home base, ending the next-to-last mission in the space shuttle program. Shuttle Atlantis is slated to launch on July 8 on NASA’s final planned shuttle mission. Shares of the Chicago-based Boeing closed at $74.84 on Friday on the New York Stock Exchange. (Reporting by Abhishek Takle in Bangalore, Editing by Jonathan Thatcher) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Boeing To Cut 510 Jobs

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Huffington Post…

In a first piece of good economic news for Chicago’s new mayor, Rahm Emanuel announced Monday that the financial services arm of General Electric would be adding 1,000 jobs in the city, nearly doubling its Chicago-based workforce. “Pound for pound, Chicago provides a lot of value for us and is a great place to be,” said Daniel Henson, president and CEO of GE Capital, Americas , to the Chicago Tribune . Mayor Emanuel has known the CEO of General Electric, Jeffrey Immelt, for some time, dating back to his days in the White House and as Congressman from Chicago’s North Side. “I called him and asked, ‘While you’re in town, do you want to grab a drink?’” Emanuel said , according to the Chicago Sun-Times . “Now, obviously having that experience and having both his email and his phone number was an advantage.” But he went on to say that GE wouldn’t have made the investment as a favor. “If this didn’t make economic sense to GE and their bottom line, they wouldn’t have done it,” Emanuel said. Both he and executives at GE said that Emanuel’s fiscal plan for the city — which includes addressing a massive $500-plus-million deficit — would take Chicago in the right direction and create a pro-business environment. According to an Associated Press report, the first 500 of the new jobs will come in within the next year , in commercial, regulatory and technical positions. The other half of the jobs will be added over the several years following. In addition to the 1,000 employees already in Chicago, GE Capital has another three thousand elsewhere in the state, WBEZ reports.

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Emanuel Announces 1,000 New Chicago Jobs From GE Capital

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CRE Professionals See Income Gains In Frothy Deal Market

April 28, 2011

With deal activity up sharply, real estate professionals have heightened expectations of increased pay-outs for commissions, bonuses and base salaries, following years of static or declining average compensation levels during the downturn. A recent survey by corporate real estate and CRE services trade group CoreNet Global, in conjunction with FPL Associates, a Chicago-based compensation consulting firm, found that nearly two-thirds, or 64% of…

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No More Bag Check Discounts

April 24, 2011

CHICAGO — There’s no more incentive to prepay online for your checked bags if you’re flying United Continental. The carrier has done away with the $2 to $3 discount that passengers used to get if they paid for their luggage online instead of at the ticket counter. The charge for domestic flights operated by Chicago-based United Continental Holdings Inc. is now $25 for the first bag and $35 for the second, no matter how or when you pay. The change began for tickets sold since March 9. United and Continental used to offer a $2 discount on the first bag and $3 off the second to encourage passengers to pay up before arriving at the airport. Delta Air Lines Inc. still offers a similar discount. Other carriers, including AMR Corp.’s American Airlines, never offered different prices. Southwest Airlines Co. continues to allow passengers to check two bags for free.

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ECM Set To Sell $625 Million in Net-Leased Assets

March 17, 2011

Equity Capital Management (ECM), a Chicago-based commercial real estate company focused exclusively on the net lease and sale leaseback sector, signed definitive agreements to sell up to $625 million of single tenant office, industrial, and retail properties under long-term net lease agreements. “With investors paying premiums for stable in-place cash flows, this would seem to be an ideal time to recycle single-tenant assets with long-term leases…

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Tribune Bankruptcy Case: Judge To Weigh In

March 7, 2011

A two-week hearing begins Monday to determine the fate of Tribune Co. more than two years after an ill-advised $8.2 billion buyout drove one of the oldest U.S. media companies into bankruptcy protection. The proceedings follow four years of tumult and intrigue at Tribune Co. The company has been through the disgrace of a bankruptcy case that has lasted far longer than planned, a CEO departure triggered by complaints about management’s raunchiness and the whiff of a financial scandal fanned by a court-appointed examiner’s conclusion that parts of the 2007 buyout had bordered on fraud. The hearing in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington, Del., will affect the ownership of the Los Angeles Times, the Chicago Tribune, The Sun of Baltimore, other daily newspapers and 23 television stations. The TV stations include Chicago-based WGN, which reaches more than 70 million homes nationwide, mostly through cable and satellite systems. The hearing edges Tribune Co. closer toward shedding most of the roughly $13 billion that it carried into bankruptcy protection. If it can unload the debt, the company believes it can make money while it tries to adapt to a marketing shift to the Internet. Judge Kevin Carey is being asked to choose between two competing reorganization plans. The plans differ in their appraisals of Tribune Co.’s current value and their limitations on which participants in the troublesome buyout can be sued for saddling the company with too much debt. Either way, the outcome is likely to leave Tribune Co. controlled by its creditors. The new owners are expected to replace the patchwork management team that has been running the Chicago-based company since the previous CEO, Randy Michaels, resigned in October amid complaints about risque conduct. Tribune Co., founded in 1847, filed for bankruptcy protection in December 2008, making it the first major U.S. newspaper publisher to do so during the Great Recession. The deep downturn magnified the challenges facing newspaper publishers as readers and advertisers moved from print to digital alternatives. The slump prompted more than a dozen other newspaper publishers to follow Tribune Co. into bankruptcy protection. Like Tribune Co., several of them were saddled with billions of debt taken on during better times. Most of them have emerged from bankruptcy protection already. The complex 2007 buyout engineered by real estate mogul Sam Zell complicated Tribune Co.’s effort to return to normal business operations. The allegations of financial conduct made many creditors less inclined to make concessions during negotiations on a reorganization plan. The independent examiner’s report last summer prompted the company to back off one proposal. This month’s hearing makes it more likely that Tribune Co. will finally emerge from bankruptcy court this year. The legal fallout could last for years, however. Both plans envision creditors pursuing lawsuits in an attempt to recover more of their losses, and there could be an appeal of Carey’s decision in the case. The stakes riding on the resolution of the convoluted saga are expected to attract a crowd. Carey is setting up a video feed in an overflow room to accommodate up to 100 more people beyond the 175 spectators that can cram into his courtroom. The judge also is clearing space in the courtroom for more than 2,000 exhibits expected to be submitted during the hearing. “It will take some time and involve some tedium,” Carey said during a housekeeping hearing last week. The hearings also could shed more light on Tribune Co.’s operations and the behind-the-scenes maneuvering that led to the Zell buyout, which took the company private and turned employees into part-owners. Reams of documents in the case have been kept under wraps to protect what has been described as confidential business information. Carey so far has rejected requests to unseal the documents, but he has warned that some of the information could come out during the hearing because he doesn’t plan to close the courtroom. Tribune Co. favors a plan that would turn over ownership to the company’s major creditors, including some that had helped line up the ruinous financing, which already has triggered lawsuits. It would shield the lenders involved in the buyout from lawsuits after the company emerges from Chapter 11. Opponents of the plan contend it would also block attempts to sue former Tribune Co. shareholders who received $4.3 billion in the buyout’s first phase. This proposal has the backing of Tribune’s Co.’s proposed new owners – a group led by banker JPMorgan Chase & Co., distressed debt specialist Angelo, Gordon & Co. and hedge fund Oaktree Capital Management. It’s also supported by Tribune Co.’s committee for unsecured creditors. A group of creditors that owns Tribune Co. debt issued before the Zell buyout has proposed an alternative plan primarily because they want fewer limits on which parties can be sued for alleged fraud. The plan also contends these note holders, led by hedge fund Aurelius Capital, are entitled to be paid bankruptcy claims totaling $1.2 billion instead of $761 million offered in the proposal backed by Tribune Co. Zell, still Tribune Co.’s chairman, has filed objections to both plans because he and a business arm, Equity Group Investments, would remain exposed to lawsuits alleging fraud. The competing reorganization plans also came up with dramatically different estimates on Tribune Co.’s business value. The company-backed plan pegs it at $6.7 billion, compared with $8.3 billion in the Aurelius-led proposal. Tribune Co. has been gradually recovering from the recession, primarily because of an industry-wide revival in television advertising. The company’s revenue last year totaled $3.1 billion, 2 percent below 2009, based on court documents. But the company still gets more of its revenue from newspapers and other publishing sources. Tribune Co. has predicted its revenue this year will decline 4 percent, dip another 2 percent in 2012 and slip 3 percent in 2013. Those forecasts assume the new owners won’t break the company apart by selling some of the newspapers and TV stations.

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Unilev Buys Offices at Houston Galleria for $176M

February 25, 2011

Unilev Capital Corp., a real estate investment firm based in Beverly Hills, CA, completed its purchase of 1.09 million square feet in Class A office space in the Uptown/Galleria area of Houston, TX. After 11 years of ownership, an entity of Chicago-based Walton Street Capital LLC sold the three-building portfolio for $176 million or $161.50 per square foot. Unilev secured a $130 million, 10-year, fixed-rate acquisition loan through JP Morgan Chase…

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Video: Schuster Says LinkedIn Valuation Should Be $1.6 Billion

January 28, 2011

Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) — Josef Schuster, founder of Chicago-based IPOX Schuster LLC, discusses LinkedIn Corp.’s filing for an initial public offering. The largest professional-networking site plans an IPO after turning a profit in the first nine months of last year and more than tripling revenue between 2007 and 2009, it said in a filing yesterday with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Schuster speaks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Tishman Closes on Mesirow’s Office Tower in Chicago

December 15, 2010

New York-based Tishman Speyer closed on its purchase of the 46-story, 1.17 million-square-foot, Class A office tower at 353 N. Clark St. in the River North area of Chicago. Although the final price was undisclosed, the building was under contract for $380 million, or nearly $324 per square foot. A subsidiary of Chicago-based financial services firm Mesirow Financial Real Estate was asking for $480 million to $495 million when it put the trophy…

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Is Groupon The Fastest-Growing Company Ever?

December 1, 2010

Groupon, an Internet coupon start-up that is reportedly a Google takeout target, may be the fastest growing company in history. Just two years after its launch, revenue for the Chicago-based deal network is expected to exceed $500 million in 2010, according to analysts. That tops the growth of Zynga, a social gaming company that previously held the title, which took three years to hit that mark, points out Wedbush equity analyst Lou Kerner.

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Video: Kelly Says Executive Pay Now More Performance-Linked: Video

October 5, 2010

Oct. 5 (Bloomberg) — Kevin Kelly, chief executive officer of Chicago-based executive search and advisory firm Heidrick & Struggles International Inc., talks about the value of executive succession plans for U.S. corporatations and the state of the executive job market. Kelly speaks with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Linda Mack of Mack International to Speak at Canadian Private Family Office … – PR Web (press release)

August 18, 2010

PR Web (press release) Linda Mack of Mack International to Speak at Canadian Private Family Office … PR Web (press release) Linda Mack of Chicago-based Mack International will lead a session on family office compensation structures at the fifth semi-annual Canadian Private Family …

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Video: Veda’s Pershad Says He’s a `Skeptic’ of Chinese Banks: Video

July 14, 2010

July 15 (Bloomberg) — Vikas Pershad, chief executive officer at Chicago-based hedge fund Veda Investments LLC, talks with Bloomberg’s Susan Li about his investment strategy for Chinese and Indian stocks. Agricultural Bank of China Ltd. may overtake local rival Bank of China Ltd. on its trading debut today to become the world’s seventh-largest lender by market value, according to analysts and investors. Pershad also discusses the outlook for U.S. and European stocks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Neal, Gerber & Eisenberg Renews 179,500 SF

June 28, 2010

Neal, Gerber & Eisenberg LLP, a Chicago-based law firm, renewed its 179,451-square-foot lease for 10 years in the office building at 2 N. LaSalle St. in Chicago. The 26-story tower totals 713,030 square feet and was constructed in 1979. Neal, Gerber…

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Video: Metropoulos Says Pabst Is `Fastest Growing’ Beer Brand: Video

June 25, 2010

June 25 (Bloomberg) — Investor Dean Metropoulos talks about the purchase of Pabst Brewing Co by his private-equity firm C. Dean Metropoulos & Co. U.S. sales of Pabst Blue Ribbon jumped 33 percent to $173 million in the 52 weeks ended April 18, making it the 20th-largest beer brand, according to SymphonyIRI Group. a Chicago-based market research firm. Metropoulos talked with Jon Erlichman on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness With Margaret Brennan. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Boeing Unlikely to Go Ahead Building 787-3 Variant

June 7, 2010

By Andrea Rothman June 7 (Bloomberg) — Boeing Co. is unlikely to go ahead with the 787-3 variant of its new Dreamliner model, a company executive said. “I’d be really surprised” if that type of the 787 got built, James Albaugh , Boeing’s head of the commercial division, said in an interview in Berlin yesterday. The executive spoke before the annual meeting of the International Air Transport Association, which begins today. The 787-3 was designed to carry as many as 330 passengers as far as 3,050 nautical miles, compared with as many as 250 passengers and as far as 8,200 nautical miles for the 787-8, according to Boeing. The Chicago-based manufacturer put the future of model under review in January after All Nippon Airways Co. changed its order for the 787-3 for another variant. The Dreamliner program has been plagued by delays as the manufacturer works on new technologies including advanced composite materials. Initially meant to fly in August 2007 and reach customers in May 2008, the plane was delayed five times. All Nippon was the first airline to order the Dreamliner, with an initial order in 2004 for 30 short-range and 20 long-haul versions. The company is awaiting its first 787 this year. Boeing’s main competitor, Airbus SAS, is working on the program for the A350 jet that the Toulouse, France-based company aims to start delivery in 2013. Maintaining that target will be “tense,” Louis Gallois , the chief executive officer of Airbus parent European Aeronautic, Defense & Space Co., said last week. To contact the reporter on this story: Andrea Rothman in Paris at aerothman@bloomberg.net

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$3 Billion Chicago-Area Bank Succumbs, FirstMerit Picks up the Pieces

May 19, 2010

FirstMerit Bank in Akron, OH, acquired the banking operations of Chicago-based Midwest Bank and Trust Co. through a purchase and assumption agreement with the Federal Deposit and Insurance Corp. (FDIC). Midwest Bank and Trust has 26 branches throughout…

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VC-Backed Envestnet Files for $100 Million IPO

March 26, 2010

Envestnet Inc. , a Chicago-based provider of online investment solutions and services to financial advisors, has filed for a $100 million IPO. It plans to trade on the NYSE under ticker symbol ENV, with Morgan Stanley, UBS and Barclays Capital serving as co-lead underwriters. The company reports nearly $78 million in 2009 revenue, down from $92 million in 2008. It also dropped from a $5.2 million net profit in 2008 to an $872k net loss in 2009. Envestnet has raised over $40 million in VC funding, from GRP Partners (29.14% pre-IPO stake), Foundation Capital (9.45%), Apex Venture Partners (7.2%), Edgewater Funds (7.15%) and Siguler Guff (5.24%). www.envestnet.com

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Simon Property Is Said to Plan Revised Offer for Bankrupt General Growth

March 16, 2010

By Dan Taub March 16 (Bloomberg) — Simon Property Group Inc. , the largest U.S. mall owner, is preparing a revised bid for its biggest rival, bankrupt General Growth Properties Inc., to be presented within a week, according to a person with knowledge of Simon’s plans. Simon’s lawyers sent a letter to General Growth’s attorneys last night, according to the person, who asked not to be identified because the correspondence is private. The story was first reported by the Wall Street Journal. Indianapolis-based Simon last month offered more than $10 billion for General Growth , which called the bid too low. The Chicago-based company said it instead plans to split itself in two to exit bankruptcy with financing from a group led by Brookfield Asset Management Inc. General Growth, owner of New York’s South Street Seaport and Boston’s Faneuil Hall, filed the largest real-estate bankruptcy in U.S. history in April after amassing $27 billion in debt making acquisitions. To contact the reporter on this story: Daniel Taub in Los Angeles at dtaub@bloomberg.net

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CBOE Files to Raise $300 Million in IPO as Exchange Swaps Seats for Shares

March 11, 2010

By Whitney Kisling March 11 (Bloomberg) — The Chicago Board Options Exchange, the last major member-owned U.S. bourse, filed to sell up to $300 million in stock in an initial public offering. CBOE Holdings Inc. said in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission that it would issue 55.8 million Class A shares to members and 12.25 million Class B shares to former members of the Chicago Board of Trade who helped create the exchange in 1973. The Chicago-based company will pay a special dividend of $1.67 for each share of Class A and Class B common stock outstanding, the filing showed. CBOE directors approved a plan in December to change the structure and swap seats for shares. The vote followed a November agreement by the CBOE to pay $4.17 million to settle appeals in a three-year-old lawsuit related to its ownership. “This is a culmination of many months of work,” William Brodsky , chief executive officer of the CBOE, said at a conference in Boca Raton, Florida, sponsored by the Futures Industry Association, a trade group based in Washington. The offering would come after eight U.S. companies delayed or postponed IPOs this year and the 13 that completed deals cut their offerings by 26 percent on average, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The Chicago Board of Trade was acquired by the Chicago Mercantile Exchange in 2007, creating CME Group Inc., the world’s largest futures exchange. Board of Trade members’ ownership rights were written into the CBOE’s incorporation documents after CBOT members created it in 1973. To contact the reporter on this story: Whitney Kisling in New York at wkisling@bloomberg.net .

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Blackstone Said to Be in Talks to Join Simon Property’s General Growth Bid

February 18, 2010

By Dan Levy and Jonathan Keehner Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — Blackstone Group LP , the world’s largest private-equity firm, may join Simon Property Group Inc.’s bid to buy bankrupt General Growth Properties Inc., according to two people with knowledge of the discussions. Blackstone is in talks with Simon, the biggest U.S. mall owner, said the people, who declined to be identified because the negotiations are private. Simon offered more than $10 billion to buy General Growth out of bankruptcy in a bid it made public Feb. 16. General Growth Chief Executive Officer Adam Metz said the offer was too low and that Simon’s goals are “not aligned” with those of his Chicago-based company. “Blackstone has a lot of capital to put to work and large investors feel there may be more opportunity at the entity-level as opposed to competing for individual properties,’’ Dan Fasulo , managing director of research firm Real Capital Analytics Inc. in New York, said in an interview. “This is a unique portfolio and there will be other interested parties.’’ Blackstone, based in New York, managed more than $23 billion in real estate assets as of Sept. 30. Its real estate funds had more than $12 billion of equity to invest as of June 30, according to the firm’s Web site. General Growth filed for Chapter 11 protection in the biggest real estate bankruptcy in U.S. history in April after amassing $27 billion in debt making acquisitions. The mall owner may raise $1 billion to $2 billion from public markets to fund its exit from bankruptcy, Reuters reported today, citing a person familiar with the situation that it didn’t identify. Les Morris , a spokesman for Indianapolis-based Simon, and David Keating , a General Growth spokesman, declined to comment on Blackstone’s interest. A Blackstone spokeswoman didn’t immediately return a telephone call seeking comment. To contact the reporters on this story: Dan Levy in San Francisco at Dlevy13@bloomberg.net ; Jonathan Keehner in New York at jkeehner@bloomberg.net

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U.S. Companies Cut 22,000 Jobs in January, Fewest in Two Years, ADP Says

February 3, 2010

By Timothy R. Homan Feb. 3 (Bloomberg) — Companies in the U.S. cut an estimated 22,000 jobs in January, in line with forecasts, according to data from a private report based on payrolls. The drop was the smallest in two years and followed a revised 61,000 decrease the prior month, data from ADP Employer Services showed today. ADP figures overstated the Labor Department’s estimate of private payroll losses by 500,000 in the six months to December. The fastest pace of growth in six years last quarter means the economy may be poised to add jobs as companies restock shelves to keep pace with rising demand. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg News anticipate the government’s report Feb. 5 will show the U.S. created jobs in January for the second time in the past three months. “Conditions in the labor market will continue to be tenuous as firms look for a pickup in sales activity before increasing employment opportunities,” Maxwell Clarke , chief U.S. economist at IDEAglobal in New York, said before the report. “Although labor conditions remain weak we anticipate further improvement taking hold in the coming months as conditions gradually improve.” The ADP figures were forecast to show a decline of 30,000 jobs, according to the median estimate of 37 economists surveyed by Bloomberg survey. Projections ranged from a 50,000 gain to a drop of 110,000. Private Payrolls ADP includes only private employment and doesn’t take into account hiring by government agencies. Macroeconomic Advisers LLC in St. Louis produces the report jointly with ADP. Planned firings fell 70 percent last month to 71,482 from 241,749 in January 2009, according to data collected by the job placement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas Inc. Announcements increased from a two-year low of 45,094 in December, the Chicago-based firm said today. The Labor Department’s report in two days is also forecast to show the unemployment held at 10 percent in January for a third straight month, according to the survey median. The economy has lost 7.2 million jobs since the recession began in December 2007, the most of any downturn in the post- World War II era. To contact the reporter on this story: Timothy R. Homan in Washington at thoman1@bloomberg.net

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Citadel’s Head of Institutional Markets Peter Santoro Said to Leave Firm

December 9, 2009

By Saijel Kishan and Katherine Burton Dec. 9 (Bloomberg) — Peter Santoro , head of institutional markets at Citadel Investment Group LLC, left the firm, the second executive to depart from Ken Griffin’s securities business since October, according to two people familiar with the situation. Santoro, 37, left the Chicago-based firm yesterday, said the people, who asked not to be named because the information is confidential. Chris Boas , 37, who was head of structured credit within Citadel’s hedge funds, will become global head of credit markets at the securities unit, the people said. Santoro’s departure comes less than two months after Citadel announced that Rohit D’Souza , who headed Citadel Securities, was leaving a year after joining the firm. D’Souza was replaced by Patrik Edsparr , who was global head of fixed income for Citadel’s hedge fund. Katie Spring , a spokeswoman for the Chicago-based firm, declined to comment. Santoro didn’t immediately return a message seeking comment. Santoro joined Citadel last year from Citigroup Inc., where he was global head of trading. He was previously the chief executive officer of Knight Financial Products, a brokerage firm that was sold to Citigroup in 2004. Boas is replaced by David Hensle and Becket Wolf , who work in Citadel’s credit business. Ravi Mattu , who worked in fixed income research within Citadel’s hedge funds, will become global head of research and strategy reporting to Edsparr. Mattu, 56, previously was head of research at Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. To contact the reporter 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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Boeing May Lose $1 Billion Oman Air Order to Airbus If 787 Further Delayed

November 5, 2009

By Steve Rothwell Nov. 5 (Bloomberg) — Boeing Co. risks losing a $1 billion order for its 787 Dreamliner aircraft to a rival model from Airbus SAS if the U.S. plane’s production schedule slips any further, Gulf carrier Oman Air said today. Oman, which has ordered six Dreamliners for delivery starting in the first half of 2014, may turn to Airbus’s A330 widebody if a two-year delay to the 787 is extended, Chief Executive Officer Peter Hill said in an interview. “I really hope they get their act together,” Hill said. “Further delays might mean that we’d have to look elsewhere.” Boeing says the Dreamliner will fly this year and that the aircraft will be delivered to the first customers at the end of 2010. The plane’s production schedule has slipped more than two years since the first of five delays emerged in October 2007. Muscat-based Oman Air already has seven A330s from Airbus on order, with the first four scheduled for handover this year. Buying the Toulouse, France-based planemaker’s newer A350 model is not an option as the carrier would be too far down the delivery list, said Hill, who spoke in London. The CEO said he’s not yet actively looking at alternatives to Chicago-based Boeing’s Dreamliner, which has a list price that averages about $178 million for the various versions. Oman Air has no plans to defer any planes as a response to the recession and needs the delivery positions to take advantage of any rebound in demand for air travel, Hill said. “We don’t have a view that we should defer, we want to develop routes, we want to expand,” he said. To contact the reporter on this story: Steve Rothwell in London at srothwell@bloomberg.net

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UGA Student Apartments Sell for $11M

October 29, 2009

Search for Atlanta Commercial Real Estate Thursday, October 29, 2009 – University Apartments on Riverbend, a 154-unit student housing complex near the University of Georgia campus, has been purchased by Chicago-based Cardinal Group Investments LLC

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Heitman Acquiring 49.9% Interest in Two Macerich Malls for $167.5M

October 1, 2009

Macerich (NYSE:MAC) and Chicago-based Heitman have entered into a joint venture on two of Macerich’s malls — Freehold Raceway Mall and Chandler Fashion Center. Under the terms of the deal, Macerich receives $167.5 million in net cash proceeds and Heitman…

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FormTech Industries Files for Bankruptcy – autoevolution

August 28, 2009

As a result of the filing, FormTech is now looking approval to sell its assets to a private equity -owned forged products company, Chicago-based Hephaestus Holdings. According to the sale plan, Hephaestus will provide $8.5 million …

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Huron Consulting Could Be Crippled By Accounting Scandal

August 4, 2009

An accounting mess at Huron Consulting Group Inc. that led to the decapitation of top management and the collapse in its share price puts the survival of the Chicago-based firm in jeopardy.

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