million-shares

Taxpayers Take Hit On Lower-Priced AIG Stock Sale

by Ryan McCarthy on May 11, 2011

Huffington Post…

NEW YORK: American International Group and the U.S. Treasury will sell nearly $9 billion in AIG stock, they said on Wednesday, a huge offering but less than half of what had been contemplated earlier this year. AIG shares fell more than 2 percent in premarket trading on the news, continuing the sharp slide that has knocked more than a third off the company’s value in the last four months. At the premarket price, AIG is less than 30 cents a share from the government’s break-even point. To be sure, when AIG was rescued in September 2008, few expected it would even exist today. The company received $182 billion in bailouts and managed to restructure while preserving two core businesses. But the prospective offering of 100 million shares by the company and 200 million shares by the Treasury has been pressured by the slide in AIG’s stock. A mix of heavy interest from short-sellers betting the shares would fall further, dilution fears for those with long positions and operational questions linked to legacy charges at two AIG units weighed on the shares, driving them from the mid-$40s range to the upper $20s. AIG said last Friday it needed to raise $3 billion in the offering, which would imply a price of around $30 a share. But one investor said Wednesday the offering was more likely to price at a discount to where the shares are now, a view shared by most sources familiar with the process. If the stock priced at a 5 percent discount to Tuesday’s close, as has been suggested is possible, the offering would be worth $8.44 billion. When Wall Street banks offered their services to manage the stock sale in January, there was talk of an offering of more than $20 billion. The U.S. Treasury also has the option to sell an extra 45 million shares to cover any over-allotments, which would raise the value of the sale to more than $10 billion. Assuming the Treasury sells only the 200 million shares, the government’s stake in AIG would fall to 77 percent from the current 92 percent. (Reporting by Ben Berkowitz; Editing by Derek Caney, Maureen Bavdek, Dave Zimmerman) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

See the original post:
Taxpayers Take Hit On Lower-Priced AIG Stock Sale

Find our Weekly Commercial Real Estate, Private Equity and Fund Newsletters at www.WeeklyBrief.net

{ 0 comments }

Warren Buffett: Social Networking Sites Are ‘Overpriced’

by The Huffington Post on March 25, 2011

Huffington Post…

Looks like Warren Buffett is a bubble believer. The billionaire adds his voice to a rising chorus of doomsayers who believe the rash of high valuations in the social media space heralds the existence of a tech bubble much like the one that led to the dot-com crash last decade. According to Bloomberg , Buffett warned investors to be wary of the high valuations circulating for social networking sites. “Most of them will be overpriced,” Buffett said. “It’s extremely difficult to value social- networking-site companies. Some will be huge winners, which will make up for the rest.” Though he didn’t mention a specific company, Facebook’s valuation recently rose to $65 billion after private equity firm General Atlantic purchased 2.5 million shares, before recently surging to $85 billion on SecondMarket. It’s not the only pre-IPO site with a billion dollar tag. Daily deals site Groupon is said to be valued at as high as $25 billion , while micromessaging network Twitter’s valuation just climbed to $7.8 billion . Do you think there’s a tech bubble? Weigh in below.

Read this article:
Warren Buffett: Social Networking Sites Are ‘Overpriced’

Find our Weekly Commercial Real Estate, Private Equity and Fund Newsletters at www.WeeklyBrief.net

{ 0 comments }

GM’s IPO Just Got More Expensive

November 16, 2010

DETROIT — A confident General Motors has added 20 million shares of preferred stock to its initial public offering, and it raised the estimated price range for common shares by about 14 percent to $32 to $33. The Detroit automaker, just 16 months out of bankruptcy protection, will now sell 80 million shares of preferred stock for $50 each when its offering takes place on Thursday. Common shares will be sold by the U.S. government and two other owners, who inherited the stock for helping GM get through a painful restructuring last year. GM announced the changes in a statement issued Tuesday morning. The automaker gave no reason for the increases, but people briefed on the sale say it’s because of high investor demand. One person said bankers handling the sale had seven times more orders for the common stock than shares. Earlier this month, GM said its owners will sell 365 million common shares for $26 to $29 each. GM also planned to sell 60 million preferred shares for $50 each. The increase in preferred shares lifts the amount GM will raise in the sale from $3 billion to $4 billion, according to the statement. Final pricing is to be set Wednesday, and bankers may stop taking orders for the shares as early as Tuesday afternoon, according to the person, who asked not to be identified because he is not authorized to speak publicly about the sale. GM and its owners could sell even more preferred and common shares in the offering. Bankers have yet to exercise an option to sell 15 percent more of the shares due to high demand. The preferred stock price will stay at $50, but GM’s total cost for those shares will remain about the same because it’s reducing the expected dividend rate from a range of 5.5 to 6 percent to between 4.75 and 5.25 percent, the person said. The preferred shares will be converted to common stock in 2013. Bankers have the option to sell roughly 55 million more common shares, although they have not yet decided to do that, the person said. The common stock price increase is a boon for the U.S. government, which is GM’s largest stockholder. The government is trying to get back the $50 billion it gave the company last year to get through bankruptcy protection. Other owners selling stock are the Canadian and Ontario governments and a union health care trust fund. Demand for the automaker’s shares is rising as its financial outlook improves. Last week, GM announced a third-quarter profit of $2 billion, bringing its earnings to a healthy $4.2 billion for the year. In presentations to investors, GM said its debt and labor costs have been cut so much that it can break even at the low point in an auto sales slump. When sales fully recover, the company said it could make $17 billion to $19 billion per year before taxes. The price hike comes during a week that could be the biggest for IPOs since 2007, according to investment adviser Renaissance Capital LLC. The IPO market has improved steadily since August 2009. The sector had been almost frozen for nearly a year after massive losses on mortgage bonds upended global credit markets.

Read the full article →

Steve Ballmer Unloads $1.3 Billion In Microsoft Stocks

November 7, 2010

Microsoft Corp. CEO Steve Ballmer has sold about $1.3 billion worth of his company shares recently, the first time he’s done so in seven years. Ballmer confirmed the stock sales Friday and said they were made to diversify his investments and aid his year-end tax planning. He said he plans to sell as many as 75 million shares by year’s end. Securities and Exchange Commission filings by Ballmer this week show he sold about 50 million shares. Ballmer still holds about 350 million shares, worth some $9 billion at Microsoft’s current price of around $26. Ballmer issued a statement “to avoid any confusion,” saying he was excited about the Microsoft’s new products and is fully committed to the company. In a rare move, Microsoft issued the statement on Ballmer’s behalf, likely looking to head off any speculation that the sale of a substantial block of his shares indicated anything negative about the company. Ballmer heads the powerful software giant and is also one of the biggest names in U.S. business “Even though this is a personal financial matter, I want to be clear about this to avoid any confusion,” Ballmer said in the statement. “I am excited about our new products and the potential for our technology to change people’s lives, and I remain fully committed to Microsoft and its success.” In a gathering with technology workers last month, Ballmer dismissed suggestions that Redmond, Wash.-based Microsoft needs to take differing approaches to technology for consumers and business users. People want the same technology at work as they do at home, he said. Ballmer also said he has no plans to retire anytime soon.

Read the full article →

CBOE Holdings Seeks to Raise Up to $339 Million in IPO of Options Exchange

May 27, 2010

By Nick Baker May 27 (Bloomberg) — CBOE Holdings Inc., owner of the Chicago Board Options Exchange, said it plans to sell shares in its initial public offering for between $27 and $29 each. The offering is for 11.7 million shares, meaning CBOE’s deal would raise up to $339 million given the forecast price range.

Read the full article →

Treasury Sells 20% of Citigroup Holdings for $6.2 Billion, Still Owns 21%

May 26, 2010

By Bradley Keoun May 26 (Bloomberg) — The U.S. Treasury Department sold 20 percent of its shares in Citigroup Inc. at a profit during the past month and authorized adviser Morgan Stanley to keep selling under a pre-arranged plan. The government found buyers for 1.5 billion of its 7.7 billion shares in the New York-based company, generating $6.2 billion of proceeds for taxpayers, the Treasury said today in a statement. That works out to an average of $4.13 per share, or 27 percent more than the $3.25 price at which the Treasury converted $25 billion of bailout funds into Citigroup common shares last September. The sales left the Treasury with 6.2 billion Citigroup shares, or a 21 percent stake, down from 27 percent. The government authorized Morgan Stanley , which is handling the transactions, to sell another 1.5 billion of the remaining shares. The plan for the first 1.5 billion-share sale was authorized April 26. “We are pleased that Treasury is making significant progress in profitably selling its common shares in Citi,” said Stephen Cohen , a spokesman for the company. There were about 23 trading days during the sale period, indicating that Treasury sold on average about 65 million shares a day. Citigroup has fallen 16 percent on the New York Stock Exchange since then. Today the shares rose 8 cents, or 2.1 percent, to $3.86 in composite trading. To contact the reporter on this story: Bradley Keoun in New York at bkeoun@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Berkowitz’s Fairholme Is Second-Biggest AIG Investor to U.S. Government

April 12, 2010

By Hugh Son and David Henry April 12 (Bloomberg) — Bruce Berkowitz ’s Fairholme Capital Management bought about 15 million shares of American International Group Inc. as the investor bet on a rebound of the bailed-out insurer. The holding is second in size only to the U.S. government’s stake of about 80 percent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The investment was disclosed today in a filing listing holdings as of March 31. Fairholme began acquiring the securities in the second half of 2009 “as we started to see cash flows of AIG turn positive,” Berkowitz said in a March 15 interview. “It is still a good company with a good global brand.” The stake was more than 13 million shares, Berkowitz said that day. The 15 million shares are valued at about $620 million based on today’s price of $41.22 on the New York Stock Exchange at 4:15 p.m. in composite trading . The stock has gained about 37 this year as Chief Executive Officer Robert Benmosche struck deals to sell two non-U.S. life insurance divisions for about $51 billion to help repay the company’s bailout. The insurer was rescued in 2008 with a package that swelled to $182.3 billion. AIG has “done a reasonable job of walling off the remaining risks” after a bailout designed to shield the insurer and banks that did business with the company from losses on mortgage-related securities, Berkowitz said in the March 15 interview. To contact the reporter on this story: Hugh Son in New York at hson1@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Icahn Buys 121M Motorola Stake

April 11, 2010

Carl Icahn has bought another 152 million shares of Motorola for 121 million

Read the full article →

Hartford Buys Back U.S. Stake in Insurer for $3.4 Billion to Exit Bailout

March 31, 2010

By Jamie McGee March 31 (Bloomberg) — Hartford Financial Services Group Inc. , the insurer that returned to profitability in the fourth quarter, repurchased preferred shares from the U.S. government for $3.4 billion to end a taxpayer-funded bailout. The government also received a final dividend payment of about $21.7 million, the insurer said today in a statement. Hartford, based in the Connecticut city of the same name, sold debt and stock to help fund the repayment. The Treasury Department still holds warrants to purchase about 52 million shares at $9.79 apiece. Hartford rose 45 cents to $28.49 as of 1:17 p.m. today on the New York Stock Exchange. The insurer said it doesn’t plan to buy back the warrants. “With the capital raise completed and the investment repaid, we are well positioned from both a capital and balance sheet perspective,” Hartford Chief Executive Officer Liam McGee said today in a statement. To contact the reporters on this story: Jamie McGee in New York at jmcgee8@bloomberg.net ;

Read the full article →

Batista’s OSX Slashes IPO Price 40%, Cuts Share Sale Size to 3.1 Million

March 16, 2010

By Jonathan Levin and Nick Baker March 16 (Bloomberg) — OSX Brasil SA said it cut the size of its planned initial public offering to about 3.1 million shares and reduced the price by as much as 40 percent. The Rio de Janeiro-based shipbuilding and oil-services company said it also cut the target share price to 800 reais. The company previously said it planned to sell 5.5 million shares priced from 1,000 reais to 1,333.33 reais on March 17, according to a prospectus published in Brazilian newspaper Valor Economico. To contact the reporters on this story: Jonathan Levin in Caracas at jlevin20@bloomberg.net ;

Read the full article →

Solar Capital Falls After Junk Bond Investor Cuts Price of $93 Million IPO

February 9, 2010

By Michael Tsang Feb. 9 (Bloomberg) — Solar Capital Ltd. , which invests in companies with junk-rated debt, fell in its first day of trading after cutting the price for its $93 million initial public offering by as much as 12 percent. The New York-based firm, run by former Apollo Management LP partner Michael Gross , declined 4.9 percent to $17.59 as of 12:02 p.m. in New York trading. The company sold 5 million shares for $18.50 apiece after asking investors to pay as much as $21 each, a Jan. 27 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission and Bloomberg data showed. Solar Capital began trading today on the Nasdaq Stock Market under the ticker SLRC. The IPO comes after U.S. companies from Imperial Capital Group Inc. to FriendFinder Networks Inc. postponed or delayed initial sales. The four previous companies that completed deals this year cut them by an average of 23 percent as the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fell for four straight weeks, the longest decline since July. Solar Capital, backed by former Citadel Investment Group LLC traders at Evanston, Illinois-based Magnetar Capital LLC and Seth Klarman’s Baupost Group LLC in Boston, plans to use the proceeds to make investments, pay operating expenses and repay debt, according to the filing. Solar Capital hired Citigroup Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. of New York to lead its sale. 2010 IPO Slump While Barclays Plc of London estimates that initial U.S. sales will triple to $50 billion this year, Ironwood Pharmaceuticals Inc.’s offering was the only IPO of four scheduled for last week to be completed. The Cambridge, Massachusetts-based drug developer cut its price by 30 percent in the biggest reduction for a U.S. sale this year. Imperial Capital of Los Angeles shelved what would have been the first IPO by a U.S. investment bank since 2007. Boca Raton, Florida-based FriendFinder , the publisher of Penthouse magazine, said it postponed due to “market conditions.” At least three U.S. companies are scheduled to offer stock through IPOs today, according to Bloomberg data. Graham Packaging Co. , 75-percent owned by New York-based Blackstone Group LP, is scheduled to sell as much as $373 million of shares in the first U.S. IPO of 2010 for the world’s largest private-equity firm. Terreno Realty Corp. , the San Francisco-based company formed to buy industrial properties in coastal markets, plans to sell stock after cutting its offering to 8.75 million shares. The fund on Jan. 25 became the first U.S. company to postpone an IPO in 2010 after its lead underwriter, New York based Goldman Sachs Group Inc., couldn’t find enough buyers for 10 million shares at $20 each. The IPO had already been reduced from 15 million shares and pushed back from Jan. 21. To contact the reporter on this story: Michael Tsang in New York at mtsang1@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

Ackman Buys 2% of Kraft, Urges Rosenfeld to Use More Cash in Cadbury Offer

January 15, 2010

By Christine Richard and Zachary R. Mider Jan. 15 (Bloomberg) — William Ackman’s Pershing Square Capital Management LP bought a 2 percent stake in Kraft Foods Inc. and is urging management to pursue a bid for Cadbury Plc that minimizes the stock component of the offer. The stake of at least 32 million shares, valued at about $932 million based on yesterday’s closing price , will be disclosed in a filing with U.K. regulators on Jan. 18, Ackman said in an interview today. Kraft Chief Executive Officer Irene Rosenfeld has until Jan. 19 to modify Kraft’s current 10.9 billion-pound ($17.7 billion) stock-and-cash offer for the Uxbridge, England-based confectioner. “We think very highly of Irene Rosenfeld and her business plan. We think this deal makes tremendous strategic sense,” Ackman said, adding that Kraft shares are undervalued. “The more Kraft stock they issue, the less interesting this deal is. Fortunately, the seller also prefers cash.” Ackman is the second high-profile Kraft investor to weigh in on the Northfield, Illinois-based food company’s offer. Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc., Kraft’s biggest shareholder, said on Jan. 5 that Kraft’s stock is undervalued. To contact the reporter on this story: Zachary R. Mider in New York at zmider1@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Ackman Buys 2% of Kraft, Urges Rosenfeld to Use More Cash in Cadbury Offer

January 15, 2010

By Christine Richard and Zachary R. Mider Jan. 15 (Bloomberg) — William Ackman’s Pershing Square Capital Management LP bought a 2 percent stake in Kraft Foods Inc. and is urging management to pursue a bid for Cadbury Plc that minimizes the stock component of the offer. The stake of at least 32 million shares, valued at about $932 million based on yesterday’s closing price , will be disclosed in a filing with U.K. regulators on Jan. 18, Ackman said in an interview today. Kraft Chief Executive Officer Irene Rosenfeld has until Jan. 19 to modify Kraft’s current 10.9 billion-pound ($17.7 billion) stock-and-cash offer for the Uxbridge, England-based confectioner. “We think very highly of Irene Rosenfeld and her business plan. We think this deal makes tremendous strategic sense,” Ackman said, adding that Kraft shares are undervalued. “The more Kraft stock they issue, the less interesting this deal is. Fortunately, the seller also prefers cash.” Ackman is the second high-profile Kraft investor to weigh in on the Northfield, Illinois-based food company’s offer. Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc., Kraft’s biggest shareholder, said on Jan. 5 that Kraft’s stock is undervalued. To contact the reporter on this story: Zachary R. Mider in New York at zmider1@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Ackman Buys 2% Stake in Kraft, Favors Cadbury Bid

January 15, 2010

By Christine Richard and Zachary R. Mider Jan. 15 (Bloomberg) — William Ackman’s Pershing Square Capital Management LP bought a 2 percent stake in Kraft Foods Inc. and is urging management to pursue a bid for Cadbury Plc that minimizes the stock component of the offer. The stake of at least 32 million shares, valued at about $932 million based on yesterday’s closing price , will be disclosed in a filing with U.K. regulators on Jan. 18, Ackman said in an interview today. Kraft Chief Executive Officer Irene Rosenfeld has until Jan. 19 to modify Kraft’s current 10.9 billion-pound ($17.7 billion) stock-and-cash offer for the Uxbridge, England-based confectioner. “We think very highly of Irene Rosenfeld and her business plan. We think this deal makes tremendous strategic sense,” Ackman said, adding that Kraft shares are undervalued. “The more Kraft stock they issue, the less interesting this deal is. Fortunately, the seller also prefers cash.” Ackman is the second high-profile Kraft investor to weigh in on the Northfield, Illinois-based food company’s offer. Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc., Kraft’s biggest shareholder, said on Jan. 5 that Kraft’s stock is undervalued. To contact the reporter on this story: Zachary R. Mider in New York at zmider1@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Ackman Buys 2% Stake in Kraft, Favors Cadbury Bid

January 15, 2010

By Christine Richard and Zachary R. Mider Jan. 15 (Bloomberg) — William Ackman’s Pershing Square Capital Management LP bought a 2 percent stake in Kraft Foods Inc. and is urging management to pursue a bid for Cadbury Plc that minimizes the stock component of the offer. The stake of at least 32 million shares, valued at about $932 million based on yesterday’s closing price , will be disclosed in a filing with U.K. regulators on Jan. 18, Ackman said in an interview today. Kraft Chief Executive Officer Irene Rosenfeld has until Jan. 19 to modify Kraft’s current 10.9 billion-pound ($17.7 billion) stock-and-cash offer for the Uxbridge, England-based confectioner. “We think very highly of Irene Rosenfeld and her business plan. We think this deal makes tremendous strategic sense,” Ackman said, adding that Kraft shares are undervalued. “The more Kraft stock they issue, the less interesting this deal is. Fortunately, the seller also prefers cash.” Ackman is the second high-profile Kraft investor to weigh in on the Northfield, Illinois-based food company’s offer. Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc., Kraft’s biggest shareholder, said on Jan. 5 that Kraft’s stock is undervalued. To contact the reporter on this story: Zachary R. Mider in New York at zmider1@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Danish fund ups in pharma to 30%

December 31, 2009

HCM CITY – Vien Dong Pharmaceuticals Co (DVD) has completed the private placement of 3 million shares to its Danish strategic partner, BankInvest’s Private Equity New Markets (PENM) fund, at a price of VND80,500 (US$4.40) per share. With this

Read the full article →

Apple CEO Steve Jobs Takes $1 Salary In 2009

December 23, 2009

SEATTLE — Apple Inc. Chief Executive Steve Jobs was paid his customary $1 annual salary in 2009, but Apple’s strength through a rough economic climate returned the value of his personal holdings in the company to pre-meltdown levels. Jobs does not get a bonus or reimbursement for perks many other CEOs accept, such as personal security, according to a regulatory filing made Wednesday. Apple said it reimbursed Jobs $4,000 for company travel on his $90 million Gulfstream V jet, which he received as a bonus in 1999. That’s far less than the $871,000 Apple reimbursed Jobs in 2008. The CEO took nearly six months off in 2009 for medical leave, during which time he received a liver transplant. He returned to work at the company’s Cupertino, Calif., headquarters part-time at the end of June. Jobs, 54, holds 5.5 million shares of Apple’s stock. He has not sold any shares since he rejoined the company in 1997, nor has he been awarded any new equity since 2003. In 2008, the value of Jobs’ stake in the company he founded was cut in half as investors worried Apple’s pricey gadgets might not fare well through the U.S. recession. But shares of the maker of iPods, iPhones and Mac computers gained about 42 percent during the 2009 fiscal year that ended in September, and at the close of trading Wednesday, when Apple’s stock reached $202.10, Jobs’ holdings were worth about $1.1 billion. Jobs is also the largest individual shareholder of The Walt Disney Co. His 7.4 percent stake is currently worth about $4.5 billion. At an annual meeting scheduled for Feb. 25, Apple shareholders will for the first time have a chance to cast an advisory vote on the company’s executive compensation plans. Shareholders have submitted two other proposals to be voted on at the meeting. One calls for a detailed environmental sustainability report, and the other for a board committee devoted to that issue, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing Wednesday.

Read the full article →

PHIGroup Announces 75 Million Share Buy Back Authorization

December 11, 2009

LOS ANGELES and FRANKFURT, Germany, Dec. 11, 2009 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — PHIGroup, Inc. (OTCBB:PHIE) (Frankfurt:PR7) (Xetra:PR7.DE) (WKN A0RNQV), a company engaged in the development and management of real estate properties, mining interests and consulting, merger and acquisition advisory services, announced today that the company has been authorized to buy back up to 75 million shares of its common stock in the open market.

Read the full article →

Colonial Properties raises $109.8M in stock sale

October 2, 2009

it sold a total of 12.1 million shares, and raised $109.8 million after deducting expenses. The real estate investment trust sold 10.5 million shares to the public, and the underwriters of the offer exercised options to buy another 1.6 million shares.

Read the full article →

Franklin Street to sell 8 million shares

September 19, 2009

Shares of Franklin Street Properties Corp. dropped late in the week, after the investment firm which specializes in real estate said it plans to sell 8 million shares at $13 a share to repay its debt and finance potential acquisitions. On Friday, shares

Read the full article →

Franklin Street to sell 8 million shares

September 19, 2009

Shares of Franklin Street Properties Corp. dropped late in the week, after the investment firm which specializes in real estate said it plans to sell 8 million shares at $13 a share to repay its debt and finance potential acquisitions. On Friday, shares

Read the full article →

Paulson & Co. Hedge Fund Purchases Goldman Sachs, Bank of America Shares

August 12, 2009

By Saijel Kishan Aug. 12 (Bloomberg) — Paulson & Co., the hedge-fund firm run by billionaire John Paulson , bought Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Bank of America Corp. stock in the second quarter, while adding to stakes in gold companies. Paulson bought 168 million shares of Charlotte, North Carolina-based Bank of America valued at $2.2 billion as of June 30, according to a filing today with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. It was his biggest new purchase in the second quarter and made him the bank’s fourth-largest owner. Paulson also bought 2 million shares of Goldman Sachs in the period. Paulson became the largest holder of Johannesburg-based gold producer AngloGold Ashanti Ltd. after buying 40 million shares to end the quarter with a 12 percent stake. He also increased his stake in Johannesburg-based Gold Fields Ltd. , becoming the third-largest owner of its U.S.-listed shares. Stefan Prelog, a spokesman for Paulson, declined to comment on the filing. Paulson reduced his stake in Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF , a fund that mirrors moves in the Amex Gold Miners Index, after selling 11 million shares. He owned a 5.3 percent stake in the fund in the second quarter valued at $227 million, down from 15 percent in the first three months of the year. Paulson left unchanged his 9 percent stake in the SPDR Gold Trust, an investment fund that buys gold bullion, and a 4.4 percent stake in mining firm Kinross Gold Corp ., according to the filing. Money managers who oversee more than $100 million in equities must file a Form 13F within 45 days of each quarter’s end to list 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. To contact the reporter on this story: Saijel Kishan in New York at skishan@bloomberg.net ;

Read the full article →

NYSE Will Charge for Trades at Open, Close; Fees to Drop for Large Clients

July 28, 2009

By Edgar Ortega July 28 (Bloomberg) — NYSE Euronext will begin to charge brokerages for transactions at the open and close of trading in the U.S., while also cutting fees for its largest clients.

Read the full article →