stakes

March 25 (Bloomberg) — Eastman Kodak Co. has won the latest round in its patent dispute with Apple Inc. and Research In Motion Ltd., a case with the potential to generate more than $1 billion in new licensing revenue for the camera company. Bloomberg News San Francisco Bureau Chief Jeffrey Taylor reports on the stakes involved with Cory Johnson and Emily Chang on Bloomberg Television’s “Bloomberg West.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Continue reading here:
Video: Kodak Wins Round in $1 Billion Apple, RIM Patent Dispute

Oct. 25 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Cristina Alesci talks with Lisa Murphy about plans by BankUnited, the Florida lender owned by investors including Blackstone Group LP, Carlyle Group and WL Ross & Co., to use proceeds from an initial public offering to take over New York-based banks. According to a person with direct knowledge of the bank’s plans, BankUnited is aiming to raise more than $500 million in its planned IPO. In addition to raising funds for acquisitions, the bank’s private-equity backers will sell some of their stakes, the person said. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the rest here:
Video: Carlyle’s BankUnited Said to Target New York Banks: Video

Video: Slim Holds Rare Money-Loser as Pemex Spending Stalls: Video

September 30, 2010

Sept. 30 (Bloomberg) — Carlos Slim has amassed a fortune of more than $60 billion by investing in real estate and telecommunications. His recent foray into the oil industry is becoming a rare misfire. Slim, 70, bought stakes in Bronco Drilling Co. and Allis-Chalmers Energy Inc. over the past four years, betting the oil-service companies would win contracts from state-run Petroleos Mexicanos. Bronco and Allis-Chalmers have tumbled 42 percent and 75 percent respectively since Slim first disclosed his stakes in part because Pemex delayed hiring contractors. Bloomberg’s Crayton Harrison reports. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Goldman Sachs Fraud Charges Just The Beginning For Wall Street

April 17, 2010

or Goldman Sachs, it was a relatively small transaction. But for the bank — and the rest of Wall Street — the stakes couldn’t be higher. Accusations that Goldman defrauded customers who bought investments tied to risky subprime mortgages have only just begun to reverberate through the financial world.

Read the full article →

Workouts Take Center Stage Amid Historic Real Estate Collapse

February 8, 2010

/PRNewswire/ — The collapse of the U.S. housing and mortgage-backed securities markets has raised the stakes in real estate workouts and loan negotiations as never before — and both investors and legal professionals must retool their strategies to

Read the full article →

Berkshire Plans to Keep Symetra Shares After IPO in `Vote of Confidence’

January 6, 2010

By Jamie McGee Jan. 6 (Bloomberg) — Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. and White Mountains Insurance Group Ltd. , the two largest shareholders in insurer Symetra Financial Corp. , won’t cut their stakes when the company sells stock to the public this year. Berkshire and White Mountains led the investor group that formed the life and health insurer in 2004 and each will keep their 26.9 million common shares when the company completes a planned initial public offering, Bellevue, Washington-based Symetra said today in a registration statement. Symetra said in previous regulatory filings that the companies might sell their stakes, which each equal 26 percent of existing shares. “It’s certainly a vote of confidence regarding Warren Buffett’s long-term view of the business,” said Paul Bard , vice president of research at Renaissance Capital, an IPO research firm in Greenwich, Connecticut. “When he makes an investment call, investors take notice.” Stock picks by Buffett, the second-richest American, are watched by mutual funds and individuals hoping to duplicate his investing success. Omaha, Nebraska-based Berkshire kept its stake in Verisk Analytics Inc. when that company went public in October, while other owners such as American International Group Inc. and Travelers Cos. sold shares. Verisk, which sells actuarial data to insurers, has jumped 39 percent. Symetra plans to raise as much as $434.7 million in an initial public offering of 31 million shares, today’s filing said. The target figure was scaled back from a planned sale of as much as $575 million that had been listed in a Dec. 29 registration statement. ‘A Great Sign’ Investors formed Symetra in 2004 by buying insurance and investment units from Safeco Corp. , the property insurer bought by Liberty Mutual Group Inc. in 2008. Berkshire’s decision to retain the shares is “a great sign,” said Francis Gaskins , president of IPOdesktop.com in Marina del Rey, California. “The fact that he is holding his stock is a definite plus,” Gaskins said. “It gives the institutional investors a feeling of security.” Berkshire, where Buffett is chairman and chief executive officer, typically gets about half its profit from insurance units including General Re Corp. and car insurer Geico Corp. Symetra has reinsurance agreements with General Re, sold medical and life protection with Berkshire’s MidAmerican Energy Holdings Co. in 2006, and provided part of the coverage for Berkshire’s Nebraska Furniture Mart last year, today’s filing said. Symetra’s life unit held $3.6 million in Berkshire Class B shares on Sept. 30, the company said in the filing. Buffett didn’t respond to a request for comment sent in an e-mail to assistant Carrie Kizer . Eric Brielmann , a spokesman for White Mountains, declined to comment. Bank of America Corp. , JPMorgan Chase & Co., Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Barclays Plc are co-managing the stock sale. To contact the reporter on this story: Jamie McGee in New York at jmcgee8@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →