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Mortgage probe unveiled as foreclosure talks loom

Posted by Economic news - CNNMoney.com on January 27, 2012 in Uncategorized
President Obama's latest probe into the mortgage meltdown will have more power than past efforts, and federal officials say it won't derail a possible $20 billion settlement for underwater and foreclosed homeowners.

 
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Report: Facebook IPO filing next week

Posted by Dan Primack on January 27, 2012 in Facebook, GM, GS, IPO, MS, Term Sheet, Venture Capital, Venture Capital Deals

Facebook may finally be ready to go public.

Facebook is planning to file IPO registration papers next Wednesday, according to the The Wall Street Journal. Few additional details so far, except that Morgan Stanley (MS) is expected to be lead underwriter with Goldman Sachs (GS) "also likely to play a major role.

[Update: WSJ is now hedging a bit on that specific date, saying that "timing is still being discussed."]

The social network would be looking to raise around $10 billion at a valuation of between $75 billion and $100 billion. That would make Facebook the largest tech IPO of all time, so long as you exclude telecom companies like AT&T Wireless ($10.62 billion in 2000). There also were a pair of foreign telecom companies -- Germany's Deutsche Telekom and Australia's Telstra -- that priced larger IPOs in the U.S.

Overall, a $10 billion offering would be the seventh-largest IPO ever to price on a U.S. exchange, and the largest since General Motors (GM) raised over $18 billion in November 2010.

An investment banking source tells Fortune that he also has heard rumors about Facebook filing next week, but was unable to confirm. A company shareholder adds that the WSJ report "makes sense to me."

Source: Thomson Reuters

The report is sure to get Silicon Valley hyperventilating, since Facebook is expected to be the largest tech IPO of all time. But it's worth remembering that speculation about this deal has been rampant for months, and there have been more than a few false alarms.

Earlier this week was a report about how Facebook had temporarily halted secondary trades of its private shares for a three-day period, causing some to expect the filing to come in that window. It didn't happen, with trades expected to resume on Monday.

Just yesterday, we engaged in the same guessing game, based on Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg agreeing to speak at a Harvard Business School event in May. If Facebook files next Wednesday, our assumption was incorrect. If it doesn't, then the waiting game just continues.

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Filed under: Term Sheet, Venture Capital Deals

 
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A German solution to an American jobs problem?

Posted by mvella1271 on January 27, 2012 in AAPL, Contributors, Term Sheet

Michael Spence, a Nobel laureate in economics and a professor at NYU, thinks he's found a breakthrough idea on creating jobs.

By Brian Dumaine, senior editor-at-large

FORTUNE -- One common refrain heard at this year's World Economic Forum in Davos: "we need to create more jobs." That's hardly a controversial stance -- after all no one is really against creating jobs. The sense here is that if we can just figure out a way to create more employment the Occupiers would disappear and business could return to the good old days. The rub is that with high consumer and government debt levels in much of the developed world, no one seems to have any idea how to achieve this goal. One exception is Michael Spence, a Nobel laureate in economics and a professor at NYU, who thinks he has a breakthrough idea on the topic.

According to Spence, recent surveys show that today's generation of young working-age Americans simply don't believe that they will have the same employment opportunities that their parents enjoyed. (For a measure of this, just ask any parent who still has a college grad living at home.) There are good jobs out there but they are mostly, argues Spence, in businesses that are trade-related, that are linked to the global economy. These jobs tend to be in fast-growing businesses that provide high-value added products. Think Apple (AAPL) and the iPhone. Trouble is, about 70% of the value of an iPhone -- design, software, etc. -- is created in the U.S. but most of the jobs, especially the manufacturing ones, are in Asia. Only about 2% of all American jobs are trade related.

So where will we find more high-paying jobs? Spence points to Germany as a model where manufacturing makes up about 30% of its GDP compared to only 16% for the U.S. Germany focuses on high-end products that have appeal in global markets. But the Germans didn't get there by accident. Spence says that Germany's business leaders, working with government and labor, provided high-end manufacturing training for workers. The three factions were also able to cut a deal years back to reduce labor rigidity in exchange for employment security. Germany has also formed industry clusters, sophisticated supply chains that help reduce costs and speed up design and manufacturing. A recent New York Times article explained that the major reason Apple does not make iPhones in America is that we simply don't have the sophisticated supply chains found in Asia.

Can America replicate the German model? Spence thinks so. He says the solutions are easy. They include training, more government spending in the short term, and more fiscal discipline in the long term, an energy policy that makes sense, and reforming our "silly tax system."

The current gridlock in Congress makes it unlikely that Washington would adopt such a long-term outlook and pragmatic approach to boosting jobs. Spence, however, remains undeterred. All we need to do, he says, is "act and learn rather than debate and wait."


Filed under: Contributors, Term Sheet

 
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Bain partner: ‘This too shall pass’

Posted by Dan Primack on January 27, 2012 in Bain Capital, Private Equity, Private Equity Deals, Term Sheet

Bain Capital has been getting kicked around all month, and now it's finally beginning to play some public defense.

Steve Pagliuca, one of the firm's managing directors, was interviewed in Davos today by Bloomberg TV, saying that criticism of his firm "will pass." He also said that the focus on private equity's job creation record -- a focus championed by Mitt Romney -- is misguided: "Bain Capital is not trying to create jobs. It's trying to create great companies, but great companies create jobs."

Watch the full interview here.


Filed under: Private Equity Deals, Term Sheet

 
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Just how rich is Romney?

Posted by Economic news - CNNMoney.com on January 27, 2012 in Uncategorized
Exactly how much is Mitt Romney worth? Hard to say.

 
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U.S. economy growing faster, but still struggling

Posted by Economic news - CNNMoney.com on January 27, 2012 in Uncategorized
The United States economy picked up speed at the end of 2011 as businesses substantially built up their inventories and consumers increased their spending.

 
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The biggest winners of Obama’s natural gas push

Posted by mvella1271 on January 27, 2012 in APC, CHK, COP, DVN, ECA, KWK, SWN, Term Sheet, XOM

The President's effort to make natural gas a viable alternative to gasoline and diesel fuel in cars and trucks could change the fate of the ailing industry.

By Cyrus Sanati, contributor

FORTUNE -- President Obama's newfound commitment to natural gas could be the spark needed to reignite the fledgling natural gas industry, while at the same time breathing life into an array of new businesses. Overproduction, coupled with anemic demand, has recently sent natural gas prices tumbling to a 10-year low, delivering a big hit to the dozens of energy companies invested in large-scale natural gas drilling projects across the US.

But the President's support to make natural gas a viable alternative to gasoline and diesel fuel in cars and trucks could change all that. While such a major transition would probably take years, if successful, it would provide a massive new market for the trillions of cubic feet of natural gas that have been recently discovered, helping to lift prices back up to profitable levels and opening up new industries linked to natural gas transportation.

This week, the President sketched out a plan to encourage the use of natural gas as an alternative fuel to power the nation's long-haul trucking fleet. Through subsidies and tax breaks, the President hopes to spur the creation of a network of natural gas filling stations. The stations would, in theory, encourage trucking companies to take a tax break by either converting or buying trucks fueled by natural gas instead of diesel fuel.

Starting with the trucking industry makes sense. Those big 18-wheelers that crisscross the nation's highways consume around a third of all oil used in the US. Getting them off diesel and on natural gas could have a major impact on the nation's oil imports, helping to reduce the country's large trade imbalance.

A few years ago it wouldn't have made sense to power a vehicle on natural gas as it was more expensive than oil on an energy equivalent basis. When natural gas prices spiked around 2005, energy companies went out in search for more supply. They ended up getting more than they bargained for. The employment of horizontal drilling and hydraulic fractionation techniques unlocked billions more cubic feet of natural gas than they thought possible. As more supply hit the market, natural gas prices plummeted. It now costs more to drill for gas in many parts of the country than it's worth. Truckers who fill up with natural gas will pay 42% less than they would if they filled up with diesel.

For the past year, energy companies have vowed to cut back on their natural gas drilling to remove excess supply from the market. Companies like Chesapeake (CHK), the nation's second largest natural gas producer, began switching from gas drilling to oil drilling earlier last year and has continued to cut production this year. The number of natural gas rigs operating in the US fell a bit over the year, but still remained elevated. But even as prices took a nosedive, production kept hitting records. Part of the reason why is the when the producers switched to oil drilling they continued to hit a lot of gas.

But if the plan is implemented and the nation's trucking fleet is successfully converted, there could be a lot of companies that would benefit if prices start to recover.

Energy companies
If the government is able to build natural gas highways, there will have a massive new market for all the excess gas pulled out of the ground. Prices could rise sharply if overall demand for natural gas starts to outstrip supply.

Producers that stand to benefit are those that have more exposure to natural gas production as opposed to oil production. Southwestern Energy (SWN) is nearly all natural gas focused. Chesapeake, which announced this week that it was slashing production by another large slag, is still a prolific natural gas producer. Other more "gassy" companies include Range Resources and Quicksilver Energy (KWK). Companies with one foot in oil and the other in natural gas would also benefit. Those include companies like Anadarko (APC), Devon (DVN) and Encana (ECA). But the big majors are not to be left out, either. ExxonMobil (XOM), through its acquisition of XTO in 2010, is the largest natural gas producer in the US. Meanwhile, ConocoPhillips (COP) maintains some strong acreage positions in the US thanks to its acquisition of Burlington Resources back in 2006.

Boone Pickens
Fierce lobbying and a marketing blitzkrieg will probably pay off big time for billionaire oilman Boone Pickens. Much of what President Obama proposed was similar to Boone's very own "Pickens Plan." The plan, marketed personally by Pickens, seeks to get the US off foreign oil by shifting to domestic natural gas. It should therefore come to no surprise that Pickens visited the White House 7 times since President Obama took office.

The Pickens Plan wasn't just a suggestion, it was a business plan. Pickens owns Clean Energy Fuels which operates a number of natural gas filling stations around the country. The company says it will have 70 stations opened by the end of 2012 in 33 states. If President Obama's energy plan gets through congress, Mr. Pickens is going to get a lot of money from the government. He could secure large contracts to fuel commercial and government vehicles worth millions.

There are only 45 truck stops that sells liquefied natural gas, which is chilled and compressed natural gas used to power big trucks. By comparison there are 5,000 truck stops selling diesel, so the potential for growth is quite large.

Manufacturers
Companies that build the big natural gas powered trucks also stand to make a pretty penny as demand skyrockets. Westport Innovations is one of the only manufactures of natural gas powered trucks. They designed the trucks used by UPS in a pilot program using natural gas trucks to deliver packages from the Las Vegas area to Utah and the West coast. The trucks currently cost around $200,000 a pop, twice as much as a diesel-powered truck. Government subsidies will help bridge that gap. The price of a natural gas truck should fall as demand rises.


Filed under: Term Sheet

 
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M&A

Posted by Dan Primack on January 27, 2012 in AME, EMN, M&A, SOA, Term Sheet

Eastman Chemical Co. (NYSE: EMN) has agreed to acquire Solutia Inc. (NYSE: SOA) for $4.7 billion in cash and stock. The deal represents a 42% premium over yesterday's closing price for Solutia shares. www.solutia.com

Radiate Media (f.k.a. Matchbin) of Bountiful, Utah has acquired Nokia's media advertising business for an undisclosed amount. www.nokia.com

Industrial Growth Partners has sold O'Brien Corp. to AMETEK Inc. (NYSE: AME) for approximately $175 million. O'Brien Corp. is a St. Louis-based maker of fluid and gas handling solutions used in test, measurement and flow applications in process industries. www.igpequity.com

BNP Paribas is looking to sell up to $11 billion worth of loans to oil and gas companies, according to the FT.

Get yesterday's M&A news


Filed under: Term Sheet

 
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Cisco’s Chambers: Business is easier in Russia

Posted by Economic news - CNNMoney.com on January 27, 2012 in Uncategorized
Cisco Systems CEO John Chambers said Thursday that doing business in other countries, including Russia, is easier than in the United States.

 
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Pre-Marketing: Bankruptcy bonuses

Posted by Dan Primack on January 27, 2012 in Pre-marketing, Private Equity Deals, Term Sheet

* Ridiculous: The CEO bankruptcy bonus

* Rotten Apple reply: Tim Cook's letter to employees

* Better things to do: A who's who of Davos absentees

* Dan Shapiro: Your "company culture" is a meaningless platitude

* Morning Call: U.S. futures point higher, London falls earlyEuropean shares climb and the Nikkei slips.

* Brad Stone: Amazon's hit man

* Rodolfo Rosini: The age of AngelList

* New site alert: StartupDataTrends.com

* H.R. 4286: Newt's laws for governing a space colony

* Disappointing: Twitter caves to foreign gov't censorship

* Just a matter of time: Gillibrand enters Volcker Rule fray

* Survey says: U.S. investors want Romney, global investors want Obama

* Oops: Romney's tax returns show funds not listed in financial disclosure forms

* Chrystia Freeland: 'Kumbaya' capitalism collides with self-interest

* Get Term Sheet: Sign up for our daily email on deals & deal-makers

* Headline of the Day: Girl, 7, saves unconscious mother by slapping her with slice of pizza


Filed under: Private Equity Deals, Term Sheet

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