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Institutional Partners News: FINFacts Jun 1, 2011

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Hedge Fund Jobs: FINFacts Jun 1, 2011

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CrownPeak Appoints Scott Smith New VP of Sales

June 1, 2011

LOS ANGELES, CA–(Marketwire – Jun 1, 2011) – CrownPeak, the market leading software-as-a-service (SaaS) for Web Content Management , today announced the appointment of Scott Smith as Vice President of Sales. Smith, an accomplished sales executive, brings an extensive knowledge of video technology, B2C eCommerce, multi-tenant SaaS, enterprise software, and multi-channel sales. In his new position, Smith will guide the growth and development of the company’s worldwide sales.

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JOB WANTED: A Recent Grad Looks For Work On A Street Corner

May 26, 2011

NEW YORK — Fueled by equal parts desperation and frustration, Dianez Smith took to the street. During the peak of Washington, D.C.’s Wednesday morning rush-hour commute, Smith, 26, positioned herself at the corner of K and 17th Street. She was armed with a handmade sign that read, “I am a recent graduate searching for employment — résume available.” “I’m a dime a dozen in this city,” said Smith, who wore a blue pinstriped suit and black high heels. In total, she handed out 17 copies of her résume to anyone willing to give her a second glance. “I really need a job. I just need to make a decent living.” Smith, who graduated last May from Arcadia University with a bachelor’s degree in studio art, technically already has a job. She currently sells bicycles at Performance Bike in Rockville, Md. But working full-time at $8 an hour is barely enough to scrape by. Smith is also paying down more than $75,000 in student loans and nearly $3,000 in credit card debt. She currently lives with her grandmother in Silver Spring, Md. Smith is hardly the only recent graduate unable to secure a decent paying job while also struggling with piles of debt. Last week, Carl Van Horn, a professor of public policy at Rutgers University, released a study called “Unfulfilled Expectations: Recent College Graduates Struggle in a Troubled Economy.” Van Horn and his colleagues polled young people who graduated from college between 2006 and 2010. Debt is a pervasive worry. Of the 571 graduates included in the study, nearly 60 percent had borrowed money to finance their education. Research also found that half of 2009 graduates are either unemployed or working in jobs that don’t require a college degree. “The job search requires a combination of tenaciousness and constantly putting yourself out there,” said Paul Oyer, a professor of economics at Stanford University’s Graduate School of Business. “You have to put yourself in a position where luck can happen and give yourself as many options to be in the right place at the right time as you possibly can,” he said. Oyer cautioned that while tenacity is an essential quality, the appearance of being desperate is generally frowned upon. But Matthew Segal, 25, who happened across Smith during yesterday’s commute to work, said that “desperate times call for desperate measures.” More than anything, he was struck by the boldness of Smith’s approach. “She’s the perfect example of someone well-educated and ambitious, yet not too proud to go out and do something that takes an incredible amount of courage and strength,” said Segal, the founder of Our Time , a national membership organization for people under 30. Segal’s office is routinely flooded with young graduates looking for any job they can get. Many complain that employers require three years of work to even be considered. “But how the heck do they ever get three years of experience if they can’t at least get that first, entry-level position?” asked Segal. Smith has wondered exactly that on more than one occasion. “My education is apparently not good enough,” she said, before heading off to work. “A bachelor’s degree used to mean something. It used to mean that you could at least get in the door.” While her mother is a nurse and her father works at Dulles International Airport, where he deplanes aircraft, Smith was raised by her grandmother. At 77, she works as a psychotherapist. After graduating a year ago, Smith landed a paid internship at the Smithsonian Institution. But after the summer was up and the internship ended, she went back to selling bicycles. She’s been looking for better-paying job ever since. On her days off, when she’s sitting in her room at her grandmother’s house, Smith sees vestiges of a life that never came to pass — stacks of interior design books, a drafting table, a container of drawing pens. Her current job in no way relates to anything she studied in school. Yesterday morning, it was precisely that feeling of disappointment that roused her from bed at 5:45 a.m. to make her best case to any stranger willing to give her the time of day. Standing on that street corner, Smith finally got what she had long gone in search of: recognition. “Every time someone said good luck, it lifted my spirits,” recalled Smith, who crossed paths with a woman looking to hire at a local law firm. After going in for an initial interview, she’s been asked back for a second round. “I have no problem working an entry-level job,” she said. “I don’t want to start out at middle management. All I need to do is to make a self-sufficient living.”

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TODAY'S DEALS: ARA Completes Distressed Portfolio Sale | Multi …

May 23, 2011

Los Angeles–Commercial real estate investment banking firm George Smith Partners recently arranged $17 million in financing for two multifamily properties in California and South Carolina. …

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Next Chai Society Lunch

May 19, 2011

David Rifkind, Bio Principal Managing Director, George Smith Partners , Inc. Mr. Rifkind is responsible for leading the operations and strategic platform at George Smith Partners , Inc. A long-time Real Estate Finance …

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Mr. David Rifkind

May 19, 2011

Mr. Rifkind is responsible for leading the operations and strategic platform at George Smith Partners , Inc. A long-time Real Estate Finance Executive, Mr. Rifkind has a broad range of expertise with an emphasis on …

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George Smith Partners Completes $19.2 Million Refinancing of Shopping

May 18, 2011

George Smith Partners Completes $ 19.2 Million Refinancing of Shopping Center in Los Angeles National Real Estate Investor.

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Triple Net Property News » Blog Archive » George Smith Partners …

May 18, 2011

George Smith Partners Completes $ 19.2 Million Refinancing of Shopping Center in Los Angeles National Real Estate Investor. … The Best Commercial Real Estate News. Search for: …

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Retail Property for Sale » Blog Archive » George Smith Partners …

May 18, 2011

George Smith Partners Completes $ 19.2 Million Refinancing of Shopping Center in Los Angeles National Real Estate Investor.

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George Smith Partners Completes $19.2 Million Refinancing of …

May 18, 2011

Commercial real estate investment banking firm George Smith Partners has arranged a $19.2 million, cash-out refinancing of an existing bridge loan on Sylmar Towne Center, a 150000 sq. ft. grocery-anchored retail property …

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McDonalds For Sale » Blog Archive » George Smith Partners …

May 17, 2011

George Smith Partners Completes $ 19.2 Million Refinancing of Shopping Center in Los Angeles National Real Estate Investor.

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Satori Software Taps Corey Smith to Secure High-Volume Mailing Solution Market

May 12, 2011

SEATTLE, WA–(Marketwire – May 12, 2011) – Satori Software welcomes Corey Smith to its management team as its new vice president of production mailing solutions . In this new role, Smith will be responsible for helping Satori Software evolve its high-end mailing solutions to meet the needs of its current and future high-volume mailing customers.

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Institutional Partners News: FINFacts May 11, 2011

May 12, 2011

We would also like to take a moment and encourage you to join over 2900 other commercial real estate professionals who have joined the George Smith Partners /FINfacts Linked In Group. In this group you will gain access to …

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Hedge Fund Jobs: FINFacts May 11, 2011

May 12, 2011

We would also like to take a moment and encourage you to join over 2900 other commercial real estate professionals who have joined the George Smith Partners /FINfacts Linked In Group. In this group you will gain access to …

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Mindjet Looks to Expand Upon Record 2010 Success With Strategic Executive Appointments

May 4, 2011

Leading Information Visualization Provider Taps Valerie Burman as New Vice President of Corporate Development and Strategic Alliances and Promotes Abe Smith to Vice President of Sales Americas/APAC and Global CSS

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Corporate Partner Cal Smith Joins King & Spalding in Atlanta

April 15, 2011

ATLANTA, GA–(Marketwire – April 15, 2011) – William C. (Cal) Smith, one of the leading corporate lawyers in the southeastern United States, has joined King & Spalding as a corporate partner in its Atlanta, Ga., office, the firm announced today.

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Video: Intuit’s Smith Discusses Products, Acquisition Strategy

April 12, 2011

April 12 (Bloomberg) — Brad Smith, chief executive officer of Intuit Inc., talks about the company’s tax-preparation and financial-management software products, and the outlook for acquisitions. He speaks with Emily Chang and Cory Johnson on Bloomberg Television’s “Bloomberg West.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Witness: Accused Inside Trader Removed Office Records On Day Of Arrest

March 29, 2011

NEW YORK (By Grant McCool) – A former Galleon Group trader contends he saw a brother of accused hedge fund founder Raj Rajaratnam remove notebooks from their office on the day of Rajaratnam’s October 2009 arrest, according to trial documents. The claim, from ex-Galleon employee and government witness Adam Smith, emerged in court filings in the biggest Wall Street insider trading case in a generation, with the defense asking the judge to bar that portion of his expected testimony to the jury because it was prejudicial. “I’m leaning somewhat toward the defense position,” U.S. District Judge Richard Holwell said, but he reserved final decision until Tuesday. A federal prosecutor told the judge Smith would be called to begin his testimony on Tuesday. The trial resumed on Monday with a different government witness acknowledging that some information he says he gave Rajaratnam may have been wrong or subject to media or analysts’ speculation. “Whatever I had I passed on to him,” former Intel Corp executive Rajiv Goel, 52, told defense lawyer Terence Lynam about the chipmaker’s earnings and deal information in 2007 and 2008. “I don’t know whether it was right or not.” Sri Lankan-born Rajaratnam faces criminal charges of conspiracy and securities fraud. He has vowed to clear his name at trial, arguing his trades were based on research or publicly available information. The Manhattan federal court trial began on March 8 and could last two months. Goel and Smith are among 19 people who pleaded guilty in the Galleon case. Smith gave an interview to the FBI on February 1 in which he discussed documents taken from the Galleon office on the day Rajaratnam was arrested, according to court papers. Smith claimed in the interview that Rengan Rajaratnam spoke to him about the removal of the documents some time later “in a manner in which Smith interpreted to mean that ‘Rengan wanted to confirm (Smith) was not going to say anything about the notebooks,’” the court filings say. Prosecutors argued that “Smith’s observations are being offered to prove the existence of the charged conspiracy.” Rengan Rajaratnam, also a fund manager, has been described by prosecutors as an unindicted co-conspirator. Raj Rajaratnam’s lawyers said the documents retrieved by Rengan Rajaratnam reflected Raj Rajaratnam’s “charitable donations and real property holdings on the instructions of counsel” for a bail hearing after his arrest. Rajaratnam, 53, is accused of getting inside stock tips from highly placed friends and associates about companies, including Google Inc, Intel Corp and Goldman Sachs Group, between 2003 and 2009. On Monday, prosecutors also called Xilinx Inc. executive Rick Muscha to the witness stand. Prosecutors accuse Rajaratnam of conspiring with friend Kris Chellam to obtain non-public information about Xilinx earnings. The case is USA v Raj Rajaratnam et al, U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, No. 09-01184. (Reporting by Grant McCool; editing by Andre Grenon and Matthew Lewis) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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George Smith Partners Arranges $19.7 Million Loan for Retail …

March 4, 2011

Commercial real estate investment banking firm George Smith Partners has arranged a $19.7 million loan for Doerken Properties Inc. to refinance the Citrus Marketplace in upscale Walnut Creek, Calif. …

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Video: Global Commodities’ Smith Sees Brent Oil Rising to $140

February 14, 2011

Feb. 14 (Bloomberg) — Greg Smith, executive director at Global Commodities Ltd., talks about the rise in commodity and energy prices and the prospect for increased demand from emerging markets. He speaks with Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Television’s “On The Move.”

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Oil-Dri Announces the Promotions of Jeff Libert to Chief Financial Officer and Dan Smith to Chief Accounting Officer

February 11, 2011

CHICAGO, IL–(Marketwire – February 11, 2011) – Oil-Dri Corporation of America ( NYSE : ODC ) today announced that Jeff Libert, Vice President of Finance, has been promoted to Chief Financial Officer and Dan Smith, Vice President and Controller, has been promoted to Chief Accounting Officer.

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First Western Trust Bank Strengthens Wealth Management Capabilities With New Hires

January 21, 2011

DENVER, CO–(Marketwire – January 21, 2011) – First Western Trust Bank, striving to be the best private bank for the Western wealth management client, announced today that three established wealth management professionals — David Cerullo, Peter Siple and LisAnne Smith — have joined the firm.

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Lawrence N. Field

December 8, 2010

David Rifkind, Bio Principal Managing Director, George Smith Partners , Inc. Mr. Rifkind is responsible for leading the operations and strategic platform at George Smith Partners , Inc. A long-time Real Estate Finance …

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Video: Smith Says USAA Insurance Not Interested in Acquisitions

November 19, 2010

Nov. 19 (Bloomberg) — Eric Smith, president of USAA Life Insurance Co., talks about the company’s growth strategy. Smith also discusses the state of the life insurance industry and insurance policies for U.S. military service members. He talks with Suzanne O’Halloran on Bloomberg Television’s “Bottom Line.” Bloomberg’s Mark Crumpton also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Evan Smith Likes Oil, Mining and Agriculture Stocks

November 15, 2010

Nov. 15 (Bloomberg) — Evan Smith, a portfolio manager at U.S. Global Investors Inc., discusses his investment strategy for commodities and some of his stock holdings including CF Industries Holdings Inc. and Massey Energy Co. Smith speaks with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Flanagan Says Fed May Be Adding to Volatility in Bonds

November 5, 2010

Nov. 5 (Bloomberg) — Kevin Flanagan, chief fixed-income strategist at Morgan Stanley Smith Barney, talks about Federal Reserve monetary policy and the impact quantitative easing measures may have Treasuries. Flanagan speaks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Flanagan Says Fed May Be Adding to Volatility in Bonds

November 5, 2010

Nov. 5 (Bloomberg) — Kevin Flanagan, chief fixed-income strategist at Morgan Stanley Smith Barney, talks about Federal Reserve monetary policy and the impact quantitative easing measures may have Treasuries. Flanagan speaks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Smith Says Average Facebook Share Trade Is $2 Million: Video

October 11, 2010

Oct. 11 (Bloomberg) — Jeremy Smith, chief strategy officer at SecondMarket Inc., talks about private sales of Facebook Inc. and Zynga Game Network Inc. shares. Smith also discusses the companies’ imposition of fees of at least $2,500 for each sale of their shares. He talks with Carol Massar and Matt Miller on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Flood Sees Low U.S. Home Prices For Two More Years: Video

September 28, 2010

Sept. 28 (Bloomberg) — Eugene Flood, chief executive officer at Smith Breeden Associates Inc., talks about the outlook for U.S. housing prices and the economy. Flood speaks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Flood Sees Low U.S. Home Prices For Two More Years: Video

September 28, 2010

Sept. 28 (Bloomberg) — Eugene Flood, chief executive officer at Smith Breeden Associates Inc., talks about the outlook for U.S. housing prices and the economy. Flood speaks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Paul Smith Says Brand Growth in China `Slow But Perfect’

September 21, 2010

Sept. 21 (Bloomberg) — British fashion designer Paul Smith talks with Anastasia Haydulina about his eponymous brand’s growth in China.

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Video: Flood Discusses Prospects for Additional Fed Stimulus: Video

August 5, 2010

Aug. 5 (Bloomberg) — Eugene Flood, chief executive officer at Smith Breeden Associates Inc., discusses the prospects for additional stimulus from the Federal Reserve. Flood talks with Scarlet Fu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop With Betty Liu.” (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Smith Says Alaska Asset Sale Would Give BP `Flexibility’

July 19, 2010

July 19 (Bloomberg) — Greg Smith, managing director of Fat Prophets, talks about BP Plc’s stock price and the possible sale of its Alaskan assets. He speaks on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse” with Andrea Catherwood.

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Video: Smith Says Alaska Asset Sale Would Give BP `Flexibility’

July 19, 2010

July 19 (Bloomberg) — Greg Smith, managing director of Fat Prophets, talks about BP Plc’s stock price and the possible sale of its Alaskan assets. He speaks on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse” with Andrea Catherwood.

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Citigroup Profit Falls 10 Percent In 2Q, But Bank Sees Fewer Loan Losses

July 16, 2010

NEW YORK — Citigroup said Friday its second-quarter net income dropped 10 percent to $2.7 billion even as its losses from failed loans fell. The drop in income reflects the bank’s sale a year ago of the Smith Barney brokerage, which inflated its earnings at the time. Citigroup Inc. joins JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Bank of America Corp. in reporting earnings that rose in the April-June period as loan losses fell. That’s a positive sign for the economy, because it indicates that consumers are having an easier time paying their debts. But Citigroup, like the other banks, also had a decline in trading revenue because of the stock market’s plunge this spring. Citigroup was among the hardest hit banks by the financial crisis of 2008, and it was further hurt as many customers fell behind in loan payments during the recession. The bank’s losses from failed loans fell 31 percent to $7.96 billion during the April-June period from $11.47 billion a year ago. Despite the improving trend, CEO Vikram Pandit remained cautious about future growth, saying in a statement that “economic conditions remain challenging.” Like JPMorgan, Citigroup also removed some money from its reserves for future loan losses, which helps boost earnings. It’s also an indication that the bank is becoming more confident that the worst of the defaults is over and that delinquency and default levels are likely to shrink in the coming quarters. Citigroup removed $1.51 billion from its loss reserves during the quarter. A year earlier, the bank added $4 billion to those reserves. John Gerspach, Citi’s chief financial officer, said during a conference call with reporters that reserves could be released in future quarters as well if credit trends continue to improve. Loan losses have dropped four straight quarter, and Gerspach said he was particularly encouraged by a slowdown in new delinquencies in the credit card business. “It’s a business I’d expect to get back on its feet through 2011,” Gerspach said of Citi’s big credit card lending division. The stock market’s slump sent Citigroup’s revenue from its securities and banking division down 11 percent from a year earlier to $6 billion. That was down 26 percent from the first quarter. Citigroup said it earned $2.7 billion, or 9 cents per share, during the April-June period. That compares with $3 billion, or 49 cents per share, during the same quarter last year. The year-ago period’s profit was inflated because Citigroup recorded an after-tax gain of $6.7 billion during the quarter from the sale of a majority stake in Smith Barney to Morgan Stanley. Analysts forecast the bank would earn 5 cents per share. Total revenue fell 33 percent to $22.07 billion from $33.1 billion during the year-ago period. Citigroup’s revenue fell just short of the $22.16 billion analysts had forecast. Citigroup received $45 billion in government bailout money during the 2008 financial crisis. The company repaid $20 billion of the money late last year and the rest was converted into common stock. At the time Citi repaid the $20 billion, the government said it would sell the $25 billion in stock by the end of 2010. Earlier this month, the government said it has now sold a total of 2.6 billion shares at a profit. It still owns 5.1 billion shares. Shares of Citi fell 10 cents to $4.06 in pre-opening trading. Citi Holdings, which holds assets the company decided to sell including its worst-performing loans, lost $1.21 billion during the most recent quarter, compared with a profit of $1.22 billion last year. The year-ago figures includes the gain from the sale of Smith Barney.

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Fieldpoint Private Bank & Trust Names New President & Chief Executive Officer: Robert S. Matthews

July 7, 2010

Longtime Smith Barney/Citigroup Private Banking and Wealth Management Executive Takes Reins of Fast-Growing Member-Driven Financial Institution Ahead of New York City Expansion

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Video: Flanagan Says 10-Year Treasury Yield `Too Low Right Now’: Video

July 2, 2010

July 2 (Bloomberg) — Kevin Flanagan, chief fixed-income strategist at Morgan Stanley Smith Barney, talks with Julie Hyman about his investment advice and the prospects for the Treasury market. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Analyst Dan Smith Sees `More Upside’ for Silver Prices: Video

July 1, 2010

July 1 (Bloomberg) — Dan Smith, an analyst at Standard Chartered Plc, talks about the outlook for gold and silver prices. Smith speaks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Smith Says BP Russian Asset Sales `Not Going to Happen’

June 28, 2010

June 28 (Bloomberg) — Greg Smith, managing director of Fat Prophets, talks about the outlook for BP Plc as chief executive officer Tony Hayward meets Russian Deputy Prime Minister Igor Sechin today to discuss the company’s projects. Smith speaks with Andrea Catherwood on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse.”

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Kerviel Offered Champagne, `Coherent’ Explanations, SocGen Controller Says

June 17, 2010

By Heather Smith and Carol Matlack June 17 (Bloomberg) — Jerome Kerviel offered a Societe Generale SA internal controller champagne and presented “coherent” explanations when questioned about his trading, according to testimony in a Paris court today. Marine Auclair, in charge of comparing traders’ reports with the bank’s accounts, said she contacted Kerviel and his superiors in April 2007 after finding a “mismatch” of 94 million euros ($116.4 million) between trades he reported and what was booked in the accounting system. When asked about the discrepancy, Auclair said Kerviel “had a fairly nervous, worried air about him and said, ‘If you take care of this gap, I’ll give you a bottle of champagne.’” She testified that she never received any champagne. Kerviel is on trial for faking documents, abuse of trust, and computer hacking related to the 4.9 billion-euro trading loss the bank incurred in 2008 after unwinding 50 billion euros worth of unauthorized positions. He admitted yesterday to the accusations, while insisting the bank knew of his actions. While some of his trades “appeared fictitious” and “didn’t have a real counterparty,” Auclair said Kerviel gave her and other controllers “explanations that seemed coherent, that corresponded to the situation.” He also provided documents appearing to show they were genuine. When asked about Kerviel’s testimony earlier this week that his excuses were too “crude” to be believed, Auclair said, “I’m not an idiot.” Faced with the same circumstances again, she would still have believed what Kerviel told her, she said. Criticizing Culture An internal probe by the bank following the loss resulted in two reports in 2008 criticizing the culture in which compliance officers and controllers focused on fulfilling their obligations rather than pursuing verifications. Societe Generale was fined 4 million euros in July 2008 by the French banking commission for risk control failures. The bank “was a victim of the excess of confidence in its front office,” Catherine Lubochinsky, who directs the finance masters degree program at Universite Pantheon-Assas Paris II , testified. The rapid growth of derivatives trading in recent years “outpaced the control of risks,” said Jean-Hubert Blanchet, a professor in structured products at Paris-II. “You have a gap between the creation of new products, and risk controllers who aren’t necessarily notified at the same time.” Judge Dominique Pauthe opened today’s hearing saying Daniel Bouton , who stepped down as Societe Generale chief executive officer in April 2008, will be called to testify on June 22, the final day of testimony at the trial, which is to end June 25. To contact the reporters on this story: Heather Smith in Paris at hsmith26@bloomberg.net ; Carol Matlack in Paris at carol_matlack@businessweek.com .

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Kerviel Tells Court He Didn’t Try to Evade Societe Generale Trading Limits

June 14, 2010

By Heather Smith and Carol Matlack June 15 (Bloomberg) — Jerome Kerviel didn’t try to evade trading controls at Societe Generale SA , he said during a trial over his role in unauthorized trades that cost the bank 4.9 billion euros ($6 billion). Kerviel told a Paris court his objective in faking hedges was to carry his real trading positions forward, “to be able to realize a gain for the bank.” Kerviel, 33, is charged with falsifying documents, computer hacking and abuse of trust in connection with the 2008 trading loss at France’s second-largest bank by market value. Judge Dominique Pauthe read a series of Kerviel’s trades indicating that his positions rose from 2.4 billion euros in April 2007 to 14.4 billion euros by November of that year. While he said he never explicitly told his supervisors about the trades, Kerviel said the scope of the trades bolstered his claims that the bank knew about his activities. “Did I get up one day and say I’ll go see a manager and tell him I’ve got 30 billion euros? The answer is no,” Kerviel said. As his positions grew larger, Kerviel said he was in a “spiral” and changed records on bank computers. Kerviel testified he entered the bank’s computerized control systems to alter details of some transactions, saying he did so to be sure the risk for each was accurately recorded. He denied that he altered data in another system, saying he didn’t have the log in information. ‘False Things’ “A lot of false things have been said,” Kerviel testified. “Traders didn’t have access to the back office control system.” Claire Dumas, a risk controller who is testifying on behalf of the bank, said Kerviel used friendships he made during the years he worked with the compliance and control group to avoid closer review of his actions. “There was a clear breach of the famous Chinese wall” between traders and controllers, Dumas said. “The chain of control was clearly misused.” Yesterday, a friend of Kerviel testified that he was “very tense, very tired” the January 2008 day Societe Generale uncovered the faked hedges. Valerie Rolland-Lesueur, who had worked with Kerviel at the bank’s compliance and control group, wiped her eyes and accepted a bottle of water from Kerviel while testifying about their friendship and the bank’s compliance techniques. “I found him very tense, very tired that day, but he was often tired,” Rolland-Lesueur told the court, saying she had coffee with him on Jan. 18, 2008, the day the bank spotted the faked trades. Faithful, Transparent Christophe Mianne managed the bank’s market activities at the time. He said he ordered his traders to follow three rules: “You must be faithful, you must be transparent, and you must respect the limits.” Kerviel knew he was going to be discovered, Mianne said. “And what did he do? He increased his position. He was running into a wall. And he accelerated,” Mianne said. Jean Veil , a lawyer for the bank, said Kerviel’s position that the bank looked away as long as he was winning was “incoherent” given the fact that for the first half of 2007, his positions were losing. “You’ll have to ask them,” Kerviel said when asked why his bosses didn’t act then. He faces as many as five years in jail and 375,000 euros in fines if found guilty. To contact the reporters on this story: Heather Smith in Paris at hsmith26@bloomberg.net ; Carol Matlack in Paris at carol_matlack@businessweek.com .

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Hotel Outlook Improves After Stronger-Than-Expected First Quarter

June 2, 2010

U.S. hotels should enjoy revenue growth the rest of this year, but it probably won’t translate to the bottom line until next year, according to new lodging industry reports released this past week. According to Smith Travel Research (STR), lodging…

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New Science and Technology Practice Leader Joins SmithGroup in Washington, D.C.

May 20, 2010

WASHINGTON, DC–(Marketwire – May 20, 2010) – H. Michael Smith, AIA, LEED AP, has joined SmithGroup ‘s Washington, DC office as Science and Technology Practice Leader. He relocated from the firm’s Los Angeles office where he led their Southern California science studio. Smith’s move will enhance SmithGroup’s science and technology capabilities in the Mid-Atlantic region in response to growing academic, biomedical and government laboratory design opportunities.

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NeuroTherm acquires Smith & Nephew spine pain management assets

April 8, 2010

NeuroTherm acquires Smith & Nephew spine pain management assets

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Unpaid Internships Investigated: ‘Mostly Drudgery’ Means Employers Must Usually Pay, Say Regulators

April 2, 2010

Convinced that many unpaid internships violate minimum wage laws, officials in Oregon, California and other states have begun investigations and fined employers. Last year, M. Patricia Smith, then New York’s labor commissioner, ordered investigations into several firms’ internships. Now, as the federal Labor Department’s top law enforcement official, she and the wage and hour division are stepping up enforcement nationwide.

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Thomas Smith Elected to the Board of Directors at CU Companies

April 1, 2010

Thomas Smith Is a Senior Vice President, Chief Lending Officer at TopLine Federal Credit Union

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