proceeds

Plum Creek Repays 463M Debt

by on June 1, 2011

{ 0 comments }

Huffington Post…

WASHINGTON — An attempt to repeal some of the billion-dollar tax breaks enjoyed by the five biggest oil companies failed in the Senate Tuesday evening, as expected, when all but two Republicans and three Democrats voted to block its consideration. The final vote was 52 in favor, 48 against — eight votes shy of the filibuster-proof majority needed to bring the bill to the floor. All things considered, it was a fairly meek attack on the massive oil and gas subsidies that taxpayers are footing — even as consumers suffer from high gas prices and industry profits swell to near-record proportions . Tuesday’s Senate proposal was only to cut $2 billion worth of subsidies a year from the biggest five companies, and the proceeds would have gone to deficit reduction. By contrast, President Barack Obama called on Congress in January to eliminate some $4 billion a year in tax breaks to the entire industry, and put the proceeds into alternative energy investment. And the industry’s own lobbying juggernaut, the American Petroleum Institute, estimated that the total cost of all the tax and accounting changes proposed by Obama in his FY 2012 budget could have actually cost the oil and gas industry $90 billion over the next decade. Few if any of the president’s budget proposals have even made it onto the congressional agenda. In spite of a major Democratic push , the watered-down oil subsidies repeal couldn’t overcome the industry’s hold on Congress . Campaign donations from the industry are only part of the reason the bill was defeated. There’s also an army of lobbyists: The oil and gas companies have spent more than $1 billion on lobbying-related activities since 1998. But looking simply at the amount of money the industry has given senators over the years — either through political action committees or contributions by people associated with oil and gas companies — is still telling. The central dynamic of the vote was the nearly lockstep Republican opposition. While the industry has long favored Republicans with its campaign contributions, in the early ’90s it was by less than a 2 to 1 margin. Starting in the 1996 election cycle, the margin shot up to more than 3 to 1. This chart below, based on data from the Center for Responsive Politics , shows how much the industry has donated to each senator over the course of their careers. The Center for American Progress Action Fund totaled it all up and found that the 48 senators who voted with the industry received over $21 million in career oil contributions, while the other 52 senators received only $5.4 million. So each senator who opposed the subsidy repeal received on average five times as much oil money as those who voted for repeal. Oil & Gas Contributions Since 1989 For Senators Who Voted On S. 940 Powered by Tableau GRAPHIC BY JAKE BIALER OF THE HUFFINGTON POST

Excerpt from:
CHART: Oil Subsidies Repeal Blocked By Industry-Bankrolled Senators

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

{ 0 comments }

Big Bank Admits Rigging Bidding Process To Win Business

May 4, 2011

WASHINGTON — Big Swiss bank UBS AG has agreed to pay $160 million to resolve allegations of rigging the bidding process to win investment business from cities and towns in 36 states. Federal and state officials announced the settlements Wednesday. UBS admitted and accepted responsibility for illegal, anticompetitive conduct by former employees from 2001 through 2006, the Justice Department said. The local governments were looking to invest their proceeds from municipal bond sales. The former UBS employees manipulated the bidding process and at times paid kickbacks to bidding agents who collect proposals for government business, the Justice Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission said. The $160 million is being paid as restitution and penalties to federal and state agencies. Because UBS admitted to the conduct and cooperated, it isn’t being prosecuted.

Read the full article →

American Assets Trust Pays $129M for First & Main Bldg

March 21, 2011

American Assets Trust, Inc. (NYSE: ATT) has completed the acquisition of First & Main, a newly constructed, 364,735-square-foot, 16-story, LEED Platinum certified office building located in downtown Portland, Oregon at 100 SW Main Street. The purchase price was approximately $129.4 million, or almost $355 per square foot, which was paid for with the proceeds from the company’s initial public offering. This property commanded the highest price…

Read the full article →

Executives Collect $2 Billion Running U.S. For-Profit Colleges: BusinessWeek

November 10, 2010

Strayer Education Inc., a chain of for-profit colleges that receives three-quarters of its revenue from U.S. taxpayers, paid Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Robert Silberman $41.9 million last year. That’s 26 times the compensation of the highest-paid president of a traditional university. Top executives at the 15 U.S. publicly traded for-profit colleges, led by Apollo Group Inc. and Education Management Corp., also received $2 billion during the last seven years from the proceeds of selling company stock, Securities and Exchange Commission filings show.

Read the full article →

Maxis May Raise Up to $1.4 Billion to Expand, Repay Debt, CFO Rashidi Say

June 15, 2010

By Chong Pooi Koon June 16 (Bloomberg) — Maxis Bhd. , Malaysia’s biggest mobile-phone operator, may raise as much as 4.5 billion ringgit ($1.4 billion) through bonds and bank credit to expand and repay debt, Chief Financial Officer Rossana Rashidi said. The company controlled by billionaire T. Ananda Krishnan raised 11.2 billion ringgit in Southeast Asia’s biggest public offering in November, with all the proceeds going to its parent . It now needs funds for expansion with plans to spend 1.4 billion ringgit this year to enlarge its broadband internet network to meet rising demand, the company said in a statement yesterday. “We have been talking to our bankers. At this stage, the company is preparing to potentially tap longer-term debt in both the bank credit market as well as the bond market,” Rossana said in an interview yesterday. Maxis, based in Kuala Lumpur, hopes to raise the funds within the next three to six months, Rossana said, adding that it has yet to decide on the structure. The company will use 2.5 billion ringgit of the proceeds to repay a bridging loan and the rest for capital expenditure, she said. The mobile-phone operator is exploring both Islamic and conventional financing, Rossana said. It is also considering whether to use ringgit or dollars, she said. The company added 400,000 subscribers in the first quarter, taking the total to more than 12.6 million, Maxis said on May 31. It posted a profit of 552 million ringgit, or 7.4 sen a share, in the three months ended March 31 after adding customers to its wireless broadband services. Maxis wants to expand its third-generation network to reach 80 percent of Malaysia’s population by the year-end, it said in yesterday’s statement. “Clearly, there’s a lot of pressure on voice,” Chief Executive Officer Sandip Das said in an interview. “The next revenue is going to come from underserved geography, data and broadband. That’s where the company is investing big time.” Maxis rose 1 percent to close at 5.31 ringgit yesterday and has shed 1.1 percent this year. To contact the reporter on this story: Chong Pooi Koon at pchong17@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Gulf Oil Spill: Leaked Oil To Seep Into Supply Chain As BP Sells What It’s Collected

June 12, 2010

NEW ORLEANS — Oil from the nation’s worst spill could soon end up at gas stations, construction sites and even grocery stores once BP sells the crude taken from a ruptured well in the Gulf of Mexico to raise money for wildlife protection. Energy giant BP PLC announced this week it will donate its share of the proceeds generated by selling the oil captured from the well to fund efforts to protect and restore wildlife habitat along the Gulf Coast. The company has not released specifics on how the fund will work and said it doesn’t know how much money might be raised. But once the oil is brought to shore, it will creep into the world’s economic supply chain unnoticed by consumers. “Oil is oil,” said Julius Langlinais, professor emeritus of petroleum engineering at Louisiana State University. “There’s no stamp or anything on it. It’s all the same molecules.” Scientists have estimated that anywhere between about 40 million gallons to 109 million gallons of oil have gushed into the Gulf since a drilling rig exploded April 20, killing 11 workers and triggering the worst oil spill in U.S. history. Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen, the Obama administration’s point man for the oil spill, said that since the leak began, 4 million gallons of crude have been siphoned off the leaking well using tubes and caps. An additional 18 million gallons have been skimmed from the ocean surface, he said. The skimmed liquid is generally only 10 to 15 percent oil. Negotiations were still ongoing Friday to find a buyer for all that captured oil, BP spokesman Mark Proegler said. “There’s nothing special about it, other than everyone’s looking at it,” he said. It’s possible the oil won’t even be sold to a refinery directly by BP or processed in the Gulf. Big oil companies have trading departments that commonly swap barrels of crude with other firms or sell them to traders who could route the oil across the globe, Langlinais said. Once that crude hits a refinery, the oil could end up in a wide array of fuels and products including gasoline, diesel, heating oil, asphalt and plastic – including the bags used at grocery stores, the cases for cell phones and microwaves. It also can be used as raw feed for chemical companies. “I think it’s an eye-opening experience for people who don’t give it much thought when they finally realize how much their lives depend on oil,” Langlinais said. BP has said it plans to boost its ability to directly capture oil gushing from the well by early next week. A semi-submersible drilling rig would capture and burn up to 420,000 gallons of oil daily. Once on board, the oil and gas collected from the well will be sent down a boom and burned at sea. A drill ship already at the scene can process a maximum of 756,000 gallons of oil daily that’s sucked up through a containment cap sitting on the well head. Federal officials are still reviewing BP’s plan to build a new containment system designed to capture more oil and be more durable during hurricane season. Allen said the plan could be revised based on calculations of how much oil is spilling from the well. It’s unclear how much the captured oil will be worth once it’s sold. Oil was trading around $74 a barrel Friday, but BP officials said they expect to get a lower price than normal because the oil captured from the leak is laced with methanol. BP is injecting methanol as an antifreeze into the inside of the containment cap sitting over the gushing well to prevent the buildup of an ice-like slush that can clog the pipes. Under its operating agreement, BP gets 65 percent of the net revenue made by selling oil from the leak site. After deducting for royalty payments owed to the government, it will donate its share of the proceeds to the wildlife fund. Anadarko Petroleum Corp., which is entitled to 25 percent of the oil revenue, is still discussing what do with its share of the money when the oil is sold, Anadarko spokesman Matt Carmichael said. “We’re committed to doing the right thing,” he said. A subsidiary of Mitsui & Co. Ltd., which has a 10 percent stake, declined to comment. Meanwhile, the oil seemed to keep coming ashore unabated Saturday morning. Globs of tar lined the white sands Orange Beach, Ala. – some the size of small pancakes. Tony Tingle of Trussville, Ala., said it was even worse the evening before. “It was actually crude oil, not tar balls. All the cleaning crews flooded in. The skimming boats came in pretty quickly, helicopters were circling, and a bunch of boats came in. It smelled like a machine shop,” Tingle said. During a flight over the Gulf of Mexico, aerial spotter Sean Brumley said he saw an oily sheen and brown patches of oil floating for miles off the coast. “The Gulf looks like it has chicken pox,” Brumley said.

Read the full article →

Carlyle’s SS&C Prices IPO at High End of Range as Meru Adds to Rebound

March 31, 2010

By Craig Trudell and Michael Tsang March 31 (Bloomberg) — SS&C Technologies Holdings Inc. and Meru Networks Inc. sold shares in initial public offerings at the high end of their price ranges, as a recovery in the U.S. IPO market gained momentum. Carlyle Group’s SS&C, which provides trading and investment management software to the financial industry, raised $161 million after pricing 10.7 million shares at $15 each, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission and Bloomberg data. Sunnyvale, California-based Meru , the maker of Wi-Fi networking equipment, sold $65.8 million of shares at $15 each. Both companies sought $13 to $15 each in their sales. The initial sales came after a rally in U.S. stocks to an 18-month high spurred a revival in IPO demand. All seven American deals in the past two weeks were sold within or above the price ranges set by underwriters as the rebound in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index from its low on Feb. 8 increased to 11 percent. The first 14 offerings of 2010 were chopped by 24 percent on average, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. “The sentiment for IPOs has really improved,” said Josef Schuster , the Chicago-based founder of IPOX Capital Management LLC and manager of the Direxion Long/Short Global IPO Fund. “It’s worthwhile to consider these stocks if they price at the upper end of the range to buy them.” MaxLinear, Calix MaxLinear Inc. , which designs semiconductors that let people watch television on their mobile devices, raised 28 percent more than the Carlsbad, California-based company originally sought in its initial sale last week. The same day, Calix Inc. , which sells connection equipment to telephone companies, priced its offering at the high end of its forecast range. MaxLinear jumped 34 percent in its first day of trading, while Petaluma, California-based Calix gained 16 percent. SS&C of Windsor, Connecticut, sells software that helps fund managers and brokerages trade stocks, bonds, currencies, futures and options, as well as financial modeling tools for municipal bonds and life insurance, according to its SEC filing. The company sold a 16 percent stake and will receive 77 percent of the proceeds before fees and expenses, according to its filing. Carlyle, the Washington-based buyout firm that oversees $89 billion, didn’t plan to offer shares in the IPO and will retain a 63 percent stake. Most of the net proceeds will be used to redeem as much as $71.75 million in outstanding debt due in 2013, on which SS&C pays 11.75 percent in annual interest. The company will keep the rest and may use the money to finance potential takeovers. Relative Value The offering gives SS&C a market capitalization of $1.04 billion when it starts trading today on the Nasdaq Stock Market under the ticker SSNC. That’s 55 times the company’s 2009 net income of $19 million, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The valuation is more than three times the median 16.99 times that 98 computer-software suppliers command globally, data compiled by Bloomberg show. SS&C was also valued at premiums of at least 14 percent to two of its competitors. Evesham, England-based Misys Plc , which provides a rival service to banks and credit unions, trades at 46 times earnings. Advent Software Inc. in San Francisco, SS&C’s competitor for portfolio-management software, is valued at 48 times income, data compiled by Bloomberg show. JPMorgan Chase & Co. of New York arranged SS&C’s sale. Meru, backed by Clearstone Venture Partners and New York- based hedge fund firm D.E. Shaw & Co., will use the proceeds from the IPO to expand sales and marketing, as well as research and development, its filing showed. The company had $69.5 million in sales last year, a 27 percent increase from a year earlier. Bank of America Corp. of Charlotte, North Carolina, arranged Meru’s initial offering. Canadian IPOs Athabasca Oil Sands Corp. raised C$1.35 billion ($1.32 billion) yesterday, Canada’s biggest IPO since Toronto-based Manulife Financial Corp. sold C$2.48 billion in 1999. The oil exploration company sold 75 million shares at C$18 each, according to a prospectus. Calgary-based Athabasca’s sale exceeded Sensata Technologies Holding NV’s $569 million offering this month, making it the largest deal of 2010 in North America. To contact the reporters on this story: Craig Trudell in New York at ctrudell1@bloomberg.net ; Michael Tsang in New York at mtsang1@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

Hersha Hospitality prices public offering of stock

March 19, 2010

of new shares to 24 million common shares and will sell them at $4.25 a share. The real estate investment trust said it plans to use the proceeds to pay off debt under its… Real estate investment trust – Real estate – Hersha Hospitality

Read the full article →

Allen Stanford’s Daughter Drops Fight To Keep $1.3M Condo

January 28, 2010

DALLAS — The daughter of jailed Texas businessman R. Allen Stanford has dropped her fight to stay in a $1.3 million Houston condominium, her attorney said Thursday. Randi Stanford’s decision came hours before she was to appear in federal district court to show why she should not be held in contempt for refusing to cooperate with government efforts to sell the 2,800-square-foot home. She will move out by March 31. The condo was a gift from her father, who is accused of leading a $7 billion Ponzi scheme – allegations that he denies. Court-appointed receiver Ralph Janvey plans to sell the condo and direct the proceeds to allegedly defrauded investors. On Wednesday, Janvey filed a declaration from a forensic accountant detailing that most of the $1.3 million purchase price came from the elder Stanford’s personal bank account in Antigua, which is tied to his alleged wrongdoing. Joe Kendall, Randi Stanford’s attorney, said his client put up $20,000 for the condo and that her mother, Susan, put up $50,000. But the deed to the home is held by a limited liability company; its only member is R. Allen Stanford. “That would make selling the property by Randi Stanford very problematic under the current circumstances,” Kendall said. He added that Randi Stanford is working three jobs to support herself. Janvey notified Randi Stanford in March 2009 that he intended to sell her condo. He offered to allow her to continue living there rent-free so long as she maintained it in good order. He also offered to provide three hours notice before showing the unit to prospective buyers and 30 days notice for her to remove her possessions when it was sold. Instead, she declined to cooperate and argued that Janvey’s authority did not extend to the condo. Randi Stanford said she spent more than $113,000 for upkeep since she moved in three years ago. She has not waived her claim to a share of the proceeds from the sale proportionate to her investment in the property, Kendall said. Her father is the subject of a Securities and Exchange Commission lawsuit accusing him of promising inflated returns to about 28,000 investors on certificates of deposit at his Antiguan bank. The SEC also accuses him of skimming more than $1 billion to fund his lavish lifestyle. Stanford is jailed in the Houston area on similar criminal charges.

Read the full article →

Indian Billionaire Thapar May Buy Equipment Producer, Sell Power Operation

January 16, 2010

By Anoop Agrawal Jan. 16 (Bloomberg) — Billionaire Gautam Thapar plans to buy companies to expand India’s third-largest equipment maker and add capacity in the nation’s biggest paper maker as demand in the world’s fastest growing major economy after China surges. Crompton Greaves Ltd. , which has been searching to buy an automation equipment maker overseas will make an “announcement,” this year, Thapar said in an interview to Bloomberg-UTV . Thapar’s power unit will prepare for an initial share sale in six weeks and use the proceeds to build power plants, while Ballarpur Industries Ltd. plans to spend 8 billion rupees ($176 million) to add capacity to make paper, he said. The fast pace of growth in industrial production and surging exports in the world’s second-most populated nation is encouraging Indian companies to boost capacity and scout for acquisitions overseas. Reliance Industries Ltd. , India’s most- valuable company, is bidding for LyondellBasell Industries AF, while National Aluminium Co., India’s second-biggest producer, plans to almost triple production capacity in the next six years. “Acquisitions will enable companies increase market share faster at a time when fundamentals are improving,” said Misal Singh , an analyst at Edelweiss Capital Ltd. in Mumbai, who has a “buy” rating on Crompton Greaves. Deals in the equipment- making “sector appear imminent.” Ballarpur, based in Chandrapur, India, will boost paper production by 300,000 tons by the year ending March 2012, Thapar said in the Bloomberg-UTV interview. The company’s shares fell 0.7 percent to 27.15 rupees in Mumbai yesterday. “We were concerned about increasing our capacities but now our confidence is much higher,” Thapar said. Power Generation Thapar’s power-generating company Avantha Power & Infrastructure Ltd. plans to sell shares for the first time and use the proceeds to build 4,400 megawatt of power plants. He didn’t give a time frame for the share sale. The South Asian nation aims to double power generating capacity in the next seven years to sustain growth in the $1.2 trillion economy. The demand for power has encouraged utilities to sell shares to expand. Still power shares haven’t performed well in the Indian stock exchanges. Adani Power Ltd., controlled by billionaire Gautam Adani, has advanced 1.5 percent since selling shares for the first time in August, according to Bloomberg. NHPC Ltd. , India’s biggest hydroelectric power producer, has dropped 4.1 percent since its September IPO and Indiabulls Power Ltd., part-owned by billionaire Lakshmi Mittal , has declined 8 percent since October. “There have been a plethora of power IPOs with companies having less tangibles than we have,” Thapar said. Timing for selling shares in Avantha Power “is something which we would like to control rather than be dictated by the markets.” India’s industrial production grew at the fastest pace in 25 months in November, while gross domestic product expanded 7.9 percent in the three months to Sept. 30 from a year earlier, the quickest pace in six quarters. The economy may expand as much as 8 percent in the current financial year ending in March, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee said on Dec. 23. To contact the reporters on this story: Anoop Agrawal in Mumbai at aagrawal8@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Citigroup Says Abu Dhabi Wants Out of Deal to Buy $7.5 Billion of Stock

December 15, 2009

By Dakin Campbell Dec. 15 (Bloomberg) — Citigroup Inc. said the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority is seeking to end an agreement to buy the bank’s stock, or to receive more than $4 billion in damages. Abu Dhabi Investment, one of the world’s top two sovereign wealth funds, filed a claim alleging “fraudulent misrepresentations” tied to its agreement to buy $7.5 billion of common stock, Citigroup said today in a statement. “Citi believes the allegations are entirely without merit and intends to defend against them vigorously,” according to the statement. Abu Dhabi Investment purchased Citigroup equity units in November 2007, the bank said. The units require Citigroup to remarket junior-ranking debt securities and use the proceeds to buy Citigroup common stock in four equal installments starting next March, according to a 2007 statement from the bank. Citigroup has declined 89 percent since the end of November 2007. It fell 14 cents to $3.56 today in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. Citigroup spokesman Stephen Cohen declined to comment. The investment authority, created in 1976, managed $328 billion at the end of last year, according to estimates by economists at the Council on Foreign Relations. To contact the reporter on this story: Dakin Campbell in San Francisco at dcampbell27@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Obama’s standardized short-sale plan could help troubled homeowners

December 11, 2009

short sale involves a lender or investor agreeing to collect less than the balance owed on a mortgage debt out of the proceeds of a negotiated sale of the property. Often a short sale is the last alternative to foreclosure available to distressed

Read the full article →

1788 Vieux Cognac Sells For $36k In Paris

December 8, 2009

PARIS — A bottle of 1788 Vieux Cognac has sold at a Paris auction of wine and spirits for euro25,000 ($36,935). The cognac, which pre-dates the French Revolution by a year, was part of a sale of 18,000 bottles from Paris’ Tour d’Argent. The restaurant has one of the best wine cellars in the world. The restaurant donated the sum earned from the 1788 cognac to a French charity called Association Petits Princes, which grants the wishes of ailing children. It will keep most of the proceeds, which may later help pay for renovations. The total sales figure is to be announced later Tuesday, after the two-day sale by the Piasa auction house ends.

Read the full article →

Bank of America Raises $19.3 Billion in Biggest U.S. Stock Sale Since 2000

December 3, 2009

By Michael Tsang and David Mildenberg Dec. 4 (Bloomberg) — Bank of America Corp., the largest U.S. lender, raised $19.3 billion in a sale of securities at $15 apiece in the biggest sale of stock or preferred shares by a U.S. public company since at least 2000. The bank, which plans to repay $45 billion of U.S. rescue funds, sold 1.286 billion so-called common equivalent securities, according to Bloomberg data. The security is made up of one depositary share and one warrant and is convertible into one common share , subject to stockholder approval, according to a regulatory filing by the Charlotte, North Carolina-based bank. Bank of America plans to use the proceeds to free itself from government restrictions after accepting funds from the Troubled Asset Relief Program. Banks, brokerages and insurers have raised $1.5 trillion to shore up capital after the biggest financial crisis since the Great Depression spurred more than $1.7 trillion in writedowns and credit losses globally. “It’s a good thing for Bank of America, it’s a healthy thing and it needs to happen,” said Jason Brady , a managing director of Santa Fe, New Mexico-based Thornburg Investment Management, whose $4 billion Thornburg Income Builder Fund owns Bank of America bonds. “It doesn’t mean necessarily that Bank of America stock is a wonderful investment because they spent a bunch of money to get the government out of the way.” In May, Bank of America raised $13.5 billion issuing 1.25 billion common shares at $10.77 each in response to government stress tests and to help cushion losses tied to the takeover of Merrill Lynch & Co. The tests gauged the ability of banks to absorb losses in an extended recession, prompting Bank of America to boost capital by almost $40 billion. Succession Battle The repayment may ease efforts to replace Chief Executive Officer Kenneth D. Lewis , who’s leaving the bank Dec. 31. His successor inherits a company ranked first by assets and deposits in the U.S. The plan saves billions of dollars in TARP dividends and ends extra U.S. oversight of operations and salaries, Wells Fargo Advisors analyst Matthew Burnell wrote. “Repaying TARP is going to allow a lot more flexibility for the incoming CEO as he handpicks his individual management team,” said Todd Hagerman , an analyst in New York with Collins Stewart Plc , who has a “buy” rating on Bank of America. Bank of America rose 11 cents to $15.76 yesterday after advancing as much as 7 percent. Michael Mayo of Calyon Securities USA Inc. raised his rating to “outperform” from “underperform” and boosted his target to $19 from $12, which had been the lowest among analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. The bank plans to repay the U.S. using $26.2 billion of cash and the proceeds from the share sale, according to a statement. It expects to increase equity by $4 billion through asset sales and will issue $1.7 billion of restricted stock instead of year-end bonuses to some employees. Wells Fargo & Co ., based in San Francisco, raised $8.6 billion in May in a secondary offering, while Goldman Sachs Group Inc. sold $5.75 billion in shares in April. Wells Fargo accepted $25 billion in TARP funds last year. Goldman has repaid $10 billion received through the program. To contact the reporters on this story: Michael Tsang in New York at mtsang1@bloomberg.net ; David Mildenberg in Charlotte at dmildenberg@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Beijing Capital Land to Expand with Bond Financing

November 30, 2009

Capital Land Ltd. (SEHK: 2868) will earmark 20% of the proceeds from CNY 1 billion corporate bonds for debt repayment, and the remaining for business expansion, said Wu Huailiang, vice president of the Chinese real estate developer. After the China

Read the full article →

Sands China Raises $2.5 Billion in Hong Kong Offering at Low End of Range

November 20, 2009

By Chia-Peck Wong and Michael Tsang Nov. 21 (Bloomberg) — Sands China Ltd. and its parent, the casino company controlled by billionaire Sheldon Adelson , raised HK$19.4 billion ($2.5 billion) in a Hong Kong share sale conducted at the low end of its forecast range. A total of 1.87 billion shares were sold at HK$10.38 each, compared with the HK$10.38 to HK$13.88 that the company sought, according to Bloomberg data. Sands joins Wynn Macau Ltd. in selling shares in Hong Kong after other casino operators surged this year. Las Vegas Sands Corp.’s shares surged 176 percent this year, after dropping 94 percent in 2008. Sands China’s share of the proceeds, together with $1.75 billion in bank financing, will help it resume construction of the 13.3 million square foot (1.24 million square meters) casino-resort that was halted in November 2008 after credit markets seized up and revenue dwindled . The completion of the project will help strengthen Adelson’s challenge to 87-year-old magnate Stanley Ho , who controls SJM Holdings Ltd., the biggest casino operator by market share in Macau, the world’s largest gambling hub. Adelson, 76, is betting that more convention space, hotel beds and shopping malls will entice visitors to stay longer in the world’s biggest gambling hub. To contact the reporter on this story: Chia-Peck Wong in Hong Kong at cpwong@bloomberg.net ; Michael Tsang in New York at mtsang1@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

Madoff’s Yachts, Mercedes, Wife’s Jewels Fetch $3 Million for Scam Victims

November 18, 2009

By Katya Kazakina Nov. 18 (Bloomberg) — In less than a week, the U.S. Marshals Service has raised $3 million for the victims of Bernard L. Madoff, selling off his personal assets including a teak-accented yacht, diamond earrings and a N.Y. Mets jacket. The agency plans to hold two or three more sales, though they haven’t been scheduled yet. All the proceeds are to go to victims of Madoff’s $65 billion Ponzi scheme. Yesterday, his three powerboats and a Mercedes-Benz fetched $1.1 million at an auction in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Last weekend dozens of items owned by Madoff and his wife Ruth , including her diamond earrings and his Mets sports jacket, raised more than $900,000 in Manhattan. “All of these auctions are exceeding our expectations,” Barry Golden, deputy U.S. Marshals public information officer, said in a telephone interview yesterday. “Every dollar counts.” The 71-year-old Madoff is serving a 150-year prison sentence after pleading guilty to using money from new clients to pay off old ones. At yesterday’s auction, “Bull,” a 55-foot 1969 Rybovich Sportfish, sold for $700,000. “Sitting Bull,” a 38-foot 2003 Shelter Island Runabout Sport, went for $320,000. “Little Bull,” a 24-foot 2000 center-console boat from Maverick Boat Co. , brought in $21,000. Convertible Asset In addition, a 1999 Mercedes-Benz CLK 320 convertible owned by Ruth Madoff sold for $30,000. The car had 12,827 miles on it. By the time the auction got underway, 70 bidders had registered with National Liquidators , a Florida-based vessel- recovery company offering Madoff’s boats and the Mercedes-Benz for the marshals service. The sale began at 4 p.m. New York time and took less than an hour, according to the service. The company also took in $950,000 for a 61-foot 2003 Viking sport-fishing yacht owned by Frank DiPascali , former chief financial officer of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC. He pleaded guilty to aiding Madoff in the Ponzi scheme. That money also will go to the fund for the victims. Golden said he couldn’t characterize the buyers of the yachts. The Madoff provenance wouldn’t have meant very much to hard-core fishermen, said John D’Agostino, sales manager at HMY Yacht Sales , a Florida-based company that sells used yachts. “They want a deal,” he said in a telephone interview. “They could care less whose boat it was.” The sale could have attracted European buyers, said George Fortune, broker with Monte Carlo Luxury Yachts in Monaco. “The Euro is quite strong against the dollar and few people who are buying yachts at the moment are gravitating towards the U.S. market,” he said. Teak Woodwork The custom-designed “Bull” features a hydraulic elevator and teak woodwork, said Bob Toney, chief executive officer of National Liquidators. Bar glasses have hand-painted bulls. “Mr. Madoff has taken better care of his yachts than anyone else I know,” Toney said in a telephone interview. “They were crew-maintained all the time.” The average price for a 1969 Rybovich is $450,000 in HMY’s database, D’Agostino said. The U.S. Marshals Service seized the vessels on April 1. It is responsible for the management and disposition of the Madoffs’ assets, and for collecting the proceeds from sales. The couple’s homes in Manhattan and West Palm Beach are currently for sale. The asking price of their penthouse apartment in Manhattan was recently cut by $1 million to $8.9 million after almost two months on the market. To contact the reporter of this story: Katya Kazakina in New York at kkazakina@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

News Roundup: GoAir, SpiceJet Deal Deadlock

November 17, 2009

raise Rs crore through an initial public offer (IPO). The company plans to utilize the proceeds to repay debt and to meet working capital investments. Private equity fund IDFC invested Rs 00 crore in 006 in the company and has a .6% stake. Another PE

Read the full article →

News Roundup: GoAir, SpiceJet Deal Deadlock

November 17, 2009

raise Rs crore through an initial public offer (IPO). The company plans to utilize the proceeds to repay debt and to meet working capital investments. Private equity fund IDFC invested Rs 00 crore in 006 in the company and has a .6% stake. Another PE

Read the full article →

Sands China May Raise $2.5 Billion in Hong Kong Initial Offer, E-Mail Says

November 2, 2009

By Chia-Peck Wong and Bei Hu Nov. 2 (Bloomberg) — Las Vegas Sands Corp. , the casino company run by billionaire Sheldon Adelson , may raise about $2.5 billion in its Hong Kong initial public offering, according to a document e-mailed to investors. The company is selling an unspecified number of shares equivalent to a 15 percent stake in its business in Macau, the world’s largest gambling hub, according to another document sent to investors. It plans to use the funds to repay shareholder loans, the e-mails said. Las Vegas Sands would also use the proceeds to pay part of its Macau credit facility and to finance the completion of parcels five and six that were stalled at its project on Cotai Strip, according to both e-mails. Pricing of the sale will be fixed on Nov. 19 and shares of the company, called Sands China Ltd., will debut on Nov. 30, the e-mails said. Buddy Lam , a spokesman at Venetian Macao, Las Vegas Sands’ flagship property in Macau, wasn’t immediately available to comment today. To contact the reporters on this story: Chia-Peck Wong in Hong Kong at cpwong@bloomberg.net ; Bei Hu in Hong Kong at bhu5@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Oilexco Obtains Order for Orderly Liquidation

July 16, 2009

CALGARY, ALBERTA–(Marketwire – July 16, 2009) – Oilexco Incorporated (“Oilexco” or “the Company”) (TSX VENTURE:OIL) obtained a court order today in its ongoing Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act proceedings permitting Oilexco and its subsidiary, Oilexco Technical Services Inc., to liquidate the remainder of their respective assets and propose a plan of compromise and arrangement to creditors that will have the effect of distributing all net proceeds of liquidation to creditors in proportion to the amount of each creditor’s proven claim. The liquidation is expected to be concluded by September 30, 2009

Read the full article →