Monday, 31 December 2012

Private equity firms to buy Duff & Phelps for $665 million

NEW YORK | Sun Dec 30, 2012 5:05pm EST

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A group of private equity firms, including the Carlyle Group (CG.O), struck a deal on Sunday to buy financial advisory and investment banking firm Duff & Phelps Corp for about $665.5 million.

Duff & Phelps (DUF.N) said the firms will pay $15.55 a share to stockholders. The other buyers in the consortium are Stone Point Capital, Pictet & Cie and Edmond de Rothschild Group.

The buyers are offering a premium of 19.2 percent for the company, which closed at $13.05 a share on Friday.

The deal allows Duff & Phelps Corp. a "go-shop" period starting immediately and ending on February 8, 2013, during which it will seek higher offers from other potential buyers.

Centerview Partners is advising Duff & Phelps on the deal, while Sandler O'Neill and Partners, Credit Suisse, Barclays, and RBC Capital Markets are advising the private equity firms.

The agreement includes a break-up fee of $6.65 million from Duff & Phelps if the company abandons the deal for a higher offer before March 8, 2013.

Duff and Phelps Corp. advises clients on areas such as valuation, transactions, financial restructuring, alternative assets, disputes and taxation. It employs more than 1,000 people and has offices in North America, Europe, and Asia.

(Reporting by Sam Forgione; Editing by Jan Paschal)


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Sunday, 30 December 2012

Publisher Tribune to exit bankruptcy December 31: sources

By Ronald Grover and Liana B. Baker

Fri Dec 28, 2012 5:30pm EST

n">(Reuters) - The Tribune Co, owner of the Los Angeles Times and the Chicago Tribune, will emerge from bankruptcy on December 31, sources said on Friday, ending four years of Chapter 11 protection and setting the stage for the new company to sell off its newspapers to focus on the WGN cable channel and other TV assets.

The Chicago-based company expects to emerge with all of its assets, which include eight major daily newspapers and 23 TV stations, and to name former Fox TV and Discovery Communications executive Peter Liguori as chief executive, according to two people with knowledge of the company's plans but who are not authorized to speak to the press.

In early December, Tribune owners began interviewing investment bankers to sell some or all of its newspapers. Among those interested are San Diego Union-Tribune owner Doug Manchester and Orange County Register owner Aaron Kushner, according to people familiar with the situation.

On December 14, Warren Buffett hinted he would be interested in buying at least one Tribune newspaper, the Morning Call in Allentown, Pennsylvania.

Gary Weitman, a Tribune spokesman, had no comment.

Oaktree Capital Management, JPMorgan Chase & Co and Angelo, Gordon & Co, the controlling Tribune owners, made the decision to sell off its print business to focus instead on Tribune's television operations, which include stations in New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago.

In November, Tribune received regulatory approval from the Federal Communications Commission to transfer its broadcast licenses to the owners who will take over the company when it emerges from bankruptcy.

Tribune's WGN America is a national news feed of its Chicago station, which it repackages as a super-station and distributes via cable and satellite to more than 76 million homes, according to Nielsen Co data.

Liguori is expected to build Tribune's TV operations, including through acquisitions. Former Disney strategic planning chief Peter Murphy will be added as a board member and will advise Liguori.

Tribune's TV operations are estimated to account for $2.85 billion of the company's $7 billion valuation, while its publishing assets are estimated to represent $623 million, according to a report by its financial adviser, Lazard. The rest of its value is in other assets, including its stake in the Food Network and its cash balance.

Despite its low valuation relative to the rest of the company's assets, Tribune's newspaper unit is profitable.

Tribune's move to shed its newspaper assets was expected by industry observers, who have noted the twin challenges of declining readership and a plunge in advertising revenue wracking the newspaper industry.

The industry lost almost half of its advertising revenue in a five-year period and is now down to $24 billion, according to the Newspaper Association of America trade organization.

The declining fundamentals of newspapers, coupled with the large amount of debt Tribune carried, forced it into a long and complicated four-year bankruptcy case.

Real estate investor Sam Zell took control of Tribune in 2007 through a leveraged buyout that saddled it with $13 billion in debt just as the newspaper industry hit its downturn.

(Reporting by Ronald Grover and Liana Baker; Editing by Dan Grebler)


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ZTE to sell off stake in unit worth 1.3 billion yuan

ZTE company logos are seen at an international software and information services exhibition in Nanjing, Jiangsu province September 6, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/China Daily


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Pearson to buy stake in Nook, Barnes & Noble shares up

By Nivedita Bhattacharjee

Fri Dec 28, 2012 1:23pm EST

n">(Reuters) - British education and media publisher Pearson Plc has agreed to acquire a 5 percent stake in Barnes & Noble Inc's Nook Media unit for $89.5 million, sending shares of the bookstore operator up as much as 9.7 percent on Friday.

The Nook Media unit comprises Barnes & Noble's digital businesses — including the Nook e-reader and tablets and the Nook digital bookstore — and 674 college bookstores across the United States.

Pearson is the owner of the Financial Times newspaper and the Penguin Group publishing house.

The latest investment in Nook comes after Microsoft Corp agreed in April to invest $300 million in Barnes & Noble's digital and college businesses, a move that sent Barnes & Noble's shares up 79 percent at the time. Barnes & Noble and Microsoft completed that partnership in October.

After the Pearson deal, Barnes & Noble will own about 78.2 percent of Nook Media and Microsoft will own around 16.8 percent, the companies said.

"We always believed that Microsoft was as interested in Barnes & Noble's opportunity in education as it was in the digital consumer arena," said David Strasser, analyst with Janney Montgomery Scott.

"But after this investment from Pearson, it is more clear that Nook Media has its sight set on transforming the way education is administered in the US and around the world," he wrote in a note to clients.

Nook has been a revenue-driver since its launch in 2009 as readers buy more digital books, but product development and marketing costs to keep the devices competitive with Amazon Inc's Kindle have made it an expensive project.

Barnes & Noble said in November that the quarterly loss at the Nook division increased on higher spending on its e-readers and tablets to keep pace with larger rivals Amazon and Apple Inc.

Meanwhile, the top U.S. bookstore chain also said on Friday that sales in the crucial holiday season will come in below expectations, based on preliminary results and current sales trends.

Barnes & Noble said it would provide more details on its holiday sales on January 3. In November, it said that Nook device sales over the four-day Thanksgiving weekend - one of the busiest times of the year for U.S. retailers - doubled from last year, helped by promotions by Wal-Mart Stores Inc and Target Corp.

The 2012 holiday season may have been the worst for retailers since the 2008 financial crisis, with sales growth far below expectations, according to some early findings.

Shares of Barnes & Noble were up 6.1 percent at $15.23 on the New York Stock Exchange on Friday afternoon, off an earlier high at $15.74. They were the fourth-largest gainer in percentage terms on the NYSE.

Pearson shares ended 0.3 percent lower at 1,193 pence in London.

(Reporting by Nivedita Bhattacharjee and Jessica Wohl in Chicago and Abhishek Takle in Bangalore; editing by Joyjeet Das and Matthew Lewis)


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Monte dei Paschi completes sale of Biverbanca stake

MILAN | Fri Dec 28, 2012 1:23pm EST

MILAN (Reuters) - Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena (BMPS.MI), Italy's third-biggest bank, has completed the sale of a 60 percent stake in regional bank Biverbanca to Cassa di Risparmio di Asti for 209 million euros ($276 million).

The bank is trying to sell off assets to help to strengthen its capital base. Other assets for sale include its leasing activities and consumer credit unit Consum.it.

Monte dei Paschi said on Friday it would earn 25 million euros net from the Biverbanca sale, which would help increase its capital ratio, a measure of a bank's financial strength.

It first announced the sale in June. Both Biverbanca and Cassa di Risparmio di Asti are based in northern Italy.

Monte dei Paschi was forced to ask for government aid in June after failing to meet tougher capital rules set by European regulators.

The government bailout scheme was approved last week by the European Commission and is currently before the Italian parliament. Under the scheme, the bank will issue 3.9 billion euros of bonds to the treasury.

($1 = 0.7564 euros)

(Reporting by Antonella Ciancio. Editing by Jane Merriman)


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Tower International sells Korean operations

n">(Reuters) - Automobile parts maker Tower International Inc (TOWR.N) sold its South Korean operations to Seco, a privately owned Korean auto parts supplier, for about $47 million in cash.

Livonia, Michigan-headquartered Tower said Seco will also assume debt of about $98 million, representing a deal enterprise value of about $145 million.

The operations being sold include five manufacturing plants, a tooling plant and a technical center.

Shares of Tower International closed at $7.44 on Thursday on the New York Stock Exchange. The company's stock has shed about a third of its value in the last one year.

(Reporting by Ritika Rai in Bangalore; Editing by Maju Samuel)


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Dubai's Arabtec, Lootah win Nakheel villa contracts

DUBAI | Sun Dec 30, 2012 2:54am EST

DUBAI (Reuters) - Dubai real estate contractor Arabtec ARTC.DU and another firm have been awarded a contract worth over half a billion dirhams ($136 million) to build villas for one of the emirate's flagship developers, Nakheel NAKHD.UL.

Arabtec will build 134 luxury villas at the Jumeirah Park development in Dubai, and family owned contractor SS Lootah Group is to build 247 villas at the same location.

Nakheel's chief executive Sanjay Manchanda told reporters on Sunday that the value of the joint contract was more than half a billion dirhams. Arabtec Construction's CEO Greg Christofides said his firm's contract was worth 159 million dirhams.

Nakheel said it had sold more than 1.2 billion dirhams worth of villas in the project so far. Construction of the new villas will begin in February and the project is expected to be completed in the fourth quarter of 2014.

(Reporting by Praveen Menon; Writing by Rachna Uppal; Editing by Andrew Torchia)


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