Author: Reuters News

  • Santander Sells 50 Percent Stake in Asset Management Arm

    Spain’s biggest bank, Santander, said on Thursday it had reached a deal with U.S. private equity firms Warburg Pincus and General Atlantic LLC to sell them a 50 percent stake in its asset management arm, Reuters reports.

    (Reuters) – Spain’s biggest bank, Santander, said on Thursday it had reached a deal with U.S. private equity firms Warburg Pincus WP.UL and General Atlantic LLC to sell them a 50 percent stake in its asset management arm.

    Santander said in a statement it would book a 700 million euro ($914 million) net profit from the deal, which valued Santander Asset Management at 2.05 billion euros ($2.68 billion).

    The sale also gives Santander financial backers to expand its asset management business outside Europe and Latin America, where most of its 152 billion euros of assets currently under management are located.

    The bank said it now hoped to double these assets in the next five years and play an active part in consolidation of the sector to compete with the world’s biggest asset managers.

    Three sources had told Reuters last month that Santander had been looking to bulk up or sell its asset management arm for several years.

    The business was first put on the block in 2008. Earlier talks fell apart when the financial crisis hit and due to differences over price.

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  • With Big-Name Backers, Chinese Firm Eyes Smithfield’s Know-How, Brands

    In three decades, Wan Long has turned Shuanghui International Holdings from a small, loss-making meat processor into China’s largest, and is making his country’s biggest takeover of a U.S. company – the $4.7 billion acquisition of Smithfield Foods Inc, the world’s leading pork producer, Reuters reports.

    (Reuters) – In three decades, Wan Long has turned Shuanghui International Holdings from a small, loss-making meat processor into China’s largest, and is making his country’s biggest takeover of a U.S. company – the $4.7 billion acquisition of Smithfield Foods Inc, the world’s leading pork producer.

    Along the way, the tough negotiating Wan, who also sits on the National People’s Congress, China’s legislature, has had the backing of Goldman Sachs, Singapore state investor Temasek Holdings TEM.UL and Wen Yunsong, or Winston Wen, son of former Premier Wen Jiabao, among others.

    Wan, who is dubbed ‘China’s Chief Butcher’, and Shuanghui’s connection to Winston Wen gives the firm direct access to power brokers and key decision makers in Beijing through a powerful princeling stakeholder.

    The ties with Wen are through private equity firm New Horizon, which holds its stake in Shuanghui through two investment vehicles, according to a 2012 research report from China Investment Capital Corp.

    While Wen stepped away from day-to-day operations at New Horizon three years ago – he left to work for China Aerospace Science & Technology Corp, and last year became chairman of China Satellite Communications Corp, according to media reports – he remains involved in the fund and derives income from its investments, people with knowledge of the matter told Reuters.

    Shuanghui’s acquisition of Virginia-based Smithfield Foods will face scrutiny by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), a government panel that assesses national security risks. At least one member of Congress has said the deal raises alarms about food safety. Shuanghui was forced to recall its Shineway brand meat products from store shelves in China two years ago amid fears that some of it contained a banned feed additive.

    BRANDS, KNOW-HOW
    Political scrutiny and cheaper pork supplies apart – average live hog prices in China are around a third higher than in the United States – much of the appeal for Shuanghui will be in Smithfield’s technology, quality savvy and packaged meat business.

    The U.S. company owns well-known grocery store meat brands such as Eckrich, Armour and Farmland, which are likely to prove popular with Chinese consumers who consider foreign brands safer than many home-grown products.

    “Shuanghui’s expansion faces problems in developing its upstream (breeding) sector in accordance with food safety requirements,” said Liu Xiaofeng, an analyst with China Minzu Securities.

    Shuanghui, which controls Shenzhen-listed Henan Shuanghui Investment & Development Co, China’s largest meat processor, is one of China’s few integrated meat producers, with farm-to-fork operations – but it only raises 400,000 of its own hogs a year, a fraction of the 11 million it needs, Liu said. This means the company, which has more than 61,000 employees, relies heavily on private breeders in a country where overcrowding on farms is commonplace, raising the risk of spreading disease.

    Overcrowding on farms around Shanghai was the underlying factor that led to some 16,000 rotting pig carcasses floating down the Huangpu river earlier this year, according to official documents and interviews with local farmers.

    QUALITY STAMP
    Shuanghui would likely be keen to obtain Smithfield’s expertise in developing breeding farms that would help the Chinese firm establish a domestic product chain. It would also benefit from the U.S. company’s quality control.

    “Smithfield has very strong know-how on producing pork and bringing products to market in a very sophisticated market,” said Michael Boddington, managing director of Asian Agribusiness Consulting.

    A recent report on the U.S. Meat Export Federation website about training seminars at large Chinese meat processors, including Shuanghui, noted some participants were unfamiliar with the proper use and handling of frozen raw materials.

    “In some instances, we found that while the processing equipment was very modern, there was room for improvement in terms of maintenance and sanitation,” it said.

    Based in the city of Luohe in the central Henan province, Shuanghui was set up by the local government in 1958. Wan was appointed as head of the firm in 1984 and steered it through a restructuring and a successful initial public offering in 1998.

    After the local government sold its stake in 2006, Shuanghui transformed itself into its current complex corporate structure.

    Shuanghui International is an offshore entity registered in Hong Kong, and is 5.2 percent invested by Goldman Sachs’ main investing arm and 33.7 percent-held by funds associated with China-focused private equity firm CDH. New Horizon holds 4.2 percent, and Temasek 2.8 percent.

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  • Bain, AXA PE Bid for Maisons du Monde: Sources

    Bain Capital LLC and AXA Private Equity are the finalists in the bidding contest for French furniture-store chain Maisons du Monde, owned by private equity firms Apax and LBO France, sources tell Reuters.

    (Reuters) – Bain Capital LLC and AXA Private Equity are the finalists in the bidding contest for French furniture-store chain Maisons du Monde, owned by private equity firms Apax and LBO France, sources familiar with the deal said.

    The deal is the latest sign of a spurt of activity in France’s long-quiet LBO market. Final offers for the company, valued at up to 700 million euros ($907.69 million) including debt, are due in early June.

    At least two other private-equity auctions could also come to a close in June, including that for cosmetics retailer Nocibe, and caterer Elior, the latter valued at up to 4 billion euros, some of the same sources said.

    Private equity firms LBO France and Apax Partners each own 35 percent of Maisons du Monde, with the rest owned by Xavier Marie, the chain’s founder and CEO, and other managers.

    Apax, Bain, LBO France and AXA Private Equity all declined to comment.

    AXA Private Equity, recently spun off from insurer AXA (AXAF.PA: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), has been involved with several other recent deals, both as a potential buyer and seller, including the buyout of resorts operator Club Mediterranee (CMIP.PA: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) announced earlier this week.

    Maisons du Monde’s revenue rose 17 percent last year to 495 million, although only 6 percent was from same store sales growth. The chain, which has outlets in France, Spain, Italy and Belgium, opened 18 stores last year and plans to open another 20 this year, according to Apax’s annual report.

    Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) grew at a faster pace than revenue, Apax said, without providing precise figures. A source said its EBITDA was between 75 and 80 million euros in 2012.

    Investment banks Lazard and Messier Maris were mandated to sell the chain in February.
    ($1 = 0.7712 euros)

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  • Bain Capital Eyes Latin America Private Equity Fund

    Bain Capital is contemplating a Latin America-focused investment fund in the next three to five years, one of its managing directors said on Wednesday, making it the latest private equity firm to consider such a move, Reuters is reporting.

    May 29 (Reuters) – Bain Capital LLC is contemplating a Latin America-focused investment fund in the next three to five years, one of its managing directors said on Wednesday, making it the latest private equity firm to consider such a move.

    Buyout firms such as Carlyle Group LP and Advent International Corp have flocked to the continent, lured by its growing middle class as they invest primarily in consumer-related sectors, though also in healthcare, technology and financial services.

    Private equity and venture capital firms committed $7.9 billion to investments in Latin America in 2012 – a five-year high and a 21 percent increase from 2011, according to the Latin American Private Equity and Venture Capital Association.

    “I think after we do a couple of more investments, we may look down the road at doing a specific regional fund in the next three to five years,” Bain managing director Stephen Pagliuca told Reuters on the sidelines of the association’s Chile forum.

    Bain closed the purchase of Telefonica SA’s Latin American call-center business, Atento, for an enterprise value of about 1.1 billion euros ($1.36 billion) in December. Pagliuca said that transaction encouraged Bain to consider more deals in the region.

    “We take a kind of a toe-in-the-water approach and we expand from there. I think that our toe in the water in this region has been Atento,” Pagliuca said.

    “We try to size the funds small so we can be selective. So even in Asia our first fund was $500 million and our first fund in Europe was $500 million, and our fund in Asia is now $2.3 billion… but I don’t think we have a specific range yet,” Pagliuca added, when asked about the possible size of a Latin American fund.
    Last summer, Bain said it had completed fundraising for its second Asia fund, raising $2.3 billion, which included $300 million contributed by Bain executives.
    Bain’s third European buyout fund raised 3.5 billion euros ($4.5 billion) in 2008.

    In the absence of a specific fund for Latin America, Bain has the option to tap its North America-focused private equity fund. Bain has secured about $2.35 billion from investors for its latest flagship North America-focused fund, excluding a $600 million commitment from the firm’s fund managers, according to a regulatory filing released last month. The fund has a $6 billion target.

    “We can take out as much as we need, but we’d probably bias the (North American) funds to be 80 percent to 90 percent North American, but that’s still a lot of capital because it will be a $6 billion fund,” Pagliuca said.

    In Latin America, Bain would likely look at business sectors in which it is already active in the United States, Pagliuca said.

    “Businesses that take advantage of regional scale in technology are interesting. We have a lot of expertise in healthcare so… we’re starting to look at some opportunities in healthcare and insurance,” Pagliuca said.

    “We’ve done financial services, we own WorldPay in London. It’s the largest credit-card processor in the United Kingdom. So things like credit-card processing, we’ve looked at opportunities in Latin America,” he added.

    With about $70 billion of assets under management, Bain is one of the world’s largest buyout firms. Its investments include retailer Toys ‘R Us, child care provider Bright Horizons Family Solutions and television network The Weather Channel.

    The Boston-based buyout firm has eight offices on three continents, according to its website, including in New York, London, Munich, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Tokyo and Mumbai.

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  • Buffett Picks Up Las Vegas-based NV Energy for $5.6 billion

    Berkshire Hathaway Inc’s power production unit MidAmerican Energy will pay $5.6 billion for NV Energy Inc, the electric utility that serves Las Vegas and its power-hungry casinos, Reuters reports.

    (Reuters) – Berkshire Hathaway Inc’s power production unit MidAmerican Energy will pay $5.6 billion for NV Energy Inc, the electric utility that serves Las Vegas and its power-hungry casinos.

    MidAmerican Energy Holdings Co will purchase NV Energy’s common stock for $23.75 per share, a 23 percent premium to NV’s Wednesday closing price.
    “This is a great fit for Berkshire Hathaway, and we are pleased to make a long-term investment in Nevada’s economy,” Berkshire Hathaway Chairman Warren Buffett said in a statement.

    Las Vegas-based NV Energy, which serves about 2.4 million people in Nevada, said last month it would accelerate the retirement of its coal-fired power generating facilities and the construction of natural gas and renewable power plants.

    “By joining forces with MidAmerican, we will gain access to additional operational and financial resources,” NV Energy Chief Executive Michael Yackira said.
    Once the deal is complete, MidAmerican Energy will have assets of about $66 billion and its regulated electric and gas utilities will serve 8.4 million customers.

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  • TPG-Backed Russian Grocer Lenta Eyes London Listing – Sources

    Russian hypermarket chain Lenta, part-owned by U.S. private equity firm TPG and Russia’s VTB Capital, is talking to banks about a possible London listing which could raise at least $1 billion, sources tell Reuters.

    (Reuters) – Russian hypermarket chain Lenta, part-owned by U.S. private equity firm TPG and Russia’s VTB Capital, is talking to banks about a possible London listing which could raise at least $1 billion, sources familiar with the matter said.

    The move could produce a rare success story for a U.S. buyout firms in Russia, giving TPG the opportunity to exit an investment it made in 2009.
    Most U.S. private equity firms have shied away from Russia due to concerns about corruption and a suspicion that the best deals go to favoured oligarchs. TPG has not had an easy time with Lenta – it had a long running dispute with its founder which ended in 2011.

    An initial public offering (IPO) of Lenta would be the biggest floatation of a Russian company since mobile operator MegaFon raised $1.7 billion in November.

    Planning for an IPO is in the very early stages and could take place in the first quarter of 2014, one source familiar with the situation said. A second source said it could be in the fourth quarter of 2013 or first quarter of 2014.

    Two banking sources said the company could command a valuation of over $5 billion, meaning that selling a 20-25 percent stake could see it raise $1-$1.25 billion.

    A third source familiar with the situation said a figure of around 1 billion pounds ($1.5 billion) was realistic. A separate banking source, however, said it would more likely raise around $700 million. Meetings with banks were held this week, one of the sources said.

    VTB, which owns more than 10 percent of Lenta, has previously said it wants to sell its holding in Lenta by 2015.

    TPG owns a majority stake although the precise figure has not been disclosed. Lenta was not immediately available for comment. TPG and VTB declined to comment.

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  • Exclusive: Apache Explores Gulf of Mexico Shelf Stake Sale – Sources

    Apache Corp is exploring a sale of a stake in its shallow water Gulf of Mexico assets, attracting private equity interest as it looks to reach a $4 billion asset sale target, Reuters is reporting.

    (Reuters) – Apache Corp is exploring a sale of a stake in its shallow water Gulf of Mexico assets, attracting private equity interest as it looks to reach a $4 billion asset sale target, several people familiar with the matter said.

    Apache has hired Goldman Sachs Group Inc to sell a minority stake in its oil and gas assets located on the shallower continental shelf region of the Gulf, the people said. These assets currently produce more oil and gas and are easier and less risky to exploit than their deepwater counterparts.
    Apache would retain control and continue to develop and operate the shelf assets, they added, underscoring its reluctance to give up its status as the largest oil and gas producer in the Gulf of Mexico shelf.

    Apache shares ended up 0.9 percent at $82.39 on Tuesday.

    The Houston-based company has also hired Jefferies Group Inc to sell all of its deepwater assets in the Gulf of Mexico, which could potentially be more lucrative, but are also more costly and risky to develop, the people added.

    The shelf assets appeal primarily to financial investors, the people said. TPG Capital LP, Apollo Global Management LLC and KKR & Co LP are among the private equity firms mulling offers for them, they added.

    The deepwater assets appeal to other oil companies as well as private equity, the people said.

    TPG is working with the former Mariner Energy team, led by Scott Josey, that sold the deepwater assets to Apache in 2010 in a $3.9 billion deal, one of the people said.
    TPG is interested in acquiring both the deepwater and shelf assets provided Apache gives up control of the latter, the person added.

    Some of the people spoke on Tuesday and others spoke last week. They asked not to be identified because details of the processes are confidential.
    An Apache spokesman declined to comment on the sales processes, but noted the company has announced an asset sale program. Goldman Sachs also declined to comment. Jefferies, Apollo, TPG and KKR did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

    Apache has developed a robust list of potential assets sales and believes it can generate about $4 billion of proceeds in 2013 from the initial phase of its divestiture program, Chief Executive Steve Farris told analysts on May 9, without referring specifically to the Gulf of Mexico assets or their value.
    The company would use the money first to pay down $2 billion of debt and then buy back shares, he added.

    According to the company’s website, Apache has been the largest owner of acreage held by production on the Gulf of Mexico’s continental shelf since 2004, with about three million gross acres.

    Apache spent more than $16 billion acquiring oil and gas properties over the last three years. But the company now is selling assets off, including some that acquired over that period, as it has struggled to grow its production, causing its shares to fall.

    The company agreed to buy its deepwater position from Mariner just three years ago, five days before BP Plc’s (BP.L: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) well blowout in the Gulf of Mexico resulted in the worst oil spill in U.S. history.

    Because of the increasing regulation since the spill, drilling in the deepwater Gulf of Mexico has become a costlier and lengthier process for oil and gas companies – a daunting prospect for a company such as Apache that is looking to shore up its balance sheet.

    Investors showed their displeasure with Apache’s recent strategy and performance at the company’s annual meeting where, in a non-binding vote, they rejected a pay raise for Farris.

    Apache’s deepwater production in the Gulf of Mexico in the first-quarter of 2013 was 13,311 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boe), a 26 percent decline from the fourth quarter of 2012, Apache said earlier this month. Its production from the shelf was 92,024 boe per day, a 4 percent decline from the fourth quarter of 2012.

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  • Partnership Assurance Offers Shares for 325-400 Pence -Sources

    Private-equity backed life insurer Partnership Assurance Group has set a price range of 325 pence to 400 pence per share for its planned London listing, Reuters reported.

    (Reuters) – Private-equity backed life insurer Partnership Assurance Group has set a price range of 325 pence to 400 pence per share for its planned London listing, two people familiar with the matter said on Tuesday.

    That values the British company, majority owned by private equity firm Cinven since 2008, at between 1.3 billion and 1.6 billion pounds ($1.96 billion to $2.4 billion), one of the people said.

    Partnership, which provides annuities offering higher annual payments to customers with medical conditions, plans to raise 125 million pounds from the sale of new shares to pay down debt.

    Cinven and company management will also be selling around a quarter of their stakes in the initial public offering (IPO), which is expected to be completed around the middle of this month.

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  • Ray Lane Leaves Fisker Board as Bidders Circle Automaker

    Venture capitalist Ray Lane resigned from “green” car startup Fisker Automotive’s board of directors late last week, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers confirmed to Reuters on Tuesday.

    (Reuters) – Venture capitalist Ray Lane resigned from “green” car startup Fisker Automotive’s board of directors late last week, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers confirmed on Tuesday.

    The exit comes at a time when at least two investor groups are looking to resurrect Fisker, which has not built a car since July, people familiar with the situation have previously said.

    Kleiner Perkins was an early investor in Fisker and Lane was among the company’s most vocal supporters. The backing of Kleiner Perkins and Lane helped Fisker raise hundreds of millions of dollars in financing from private investors.

    But quality and financial missteps during the launch of Fisker’s flagship car, the $100,000-plus Karma plug-in hybrid sports car, drained the company’s coffers. Earlier this year, Fisker hired bankruptcy advisers and fired the bulk of its workforce.

    One group of investors, led by Hong Kong billionaire and Fisker investor Richard Li, is trying to salvage Fisker without resorting to a bankruptcy restructuring. Their goal is to buy the U.S. Department of Energy’s loan to Fisker, worth about $171 million, for pennies on the dollar.

    A separate group including former General Motors Co executive Bob Lutz and Wanxiang Group has offered to buy Fisker in a prearranged bankruptcy.
    Lane left the company on Friday, Kleiner Perkins said. Fisker Automotive was not immediately available to comment.

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  • KKR, Carlyle said to Eye Bids for SingTel Australia Arm

    Private equity firms KKR and Carlyle Group are among the suitors lining up bids for Singapore Telecommunications Ltd’s Australian arm, Optus Satellite, Reuters is reporting.

    (Reuters) – Private equity firms KKR and Carlyle Group are among the suitors lining up bids for Singapore Telecommunications Ltd’s Australian arm, Optus Satellite, people familiar with the matter told Reuters.

    France’s Eutelsat Communications SA is also expected to bid, the people said, with SingTel valuing the business at more than A$2 billion ($1.93 billion).
    Eutelsat (ETL.PA: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), KKR & Co (KKR.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) and Carlyle (CG.O: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) have each lined up banks to work with during the auction, according to the people familiar with the matter.

    SingTel, whose majority owner is Singapore state investor Temasek Holdings TEML.UL, sent out financial information to interested bidders on Monday, with a first round bid deadline set June 14, one of the people said.

    The company announced a strategic review of the business in March. SingTel’s Optus business sells TV, telephony and broadband services to more than 2 million subscribers in Australia and New Zealand.

    Eutelsat was not immediately available for comment. KKR and Carlyle declined to comment.

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  • Tiger Global invests $50 million in Automattic’s WordPress.com

    Automattic, the company that operates blogging service WordPress.com, announced a $50 million investment from hedge fund Tiger Global on Friday.

    (Reuters) – Automattic, the company that operates blogging service WordPress.com, announced a $50 million investment from hedge fund Tiger Global on Friday.

    The investment comes on the heels of Yahoo’s $1.1 billion acquisition of blogging company Tumblr, showing the high prices fast-growing services that targeting Internet users can command. The valuation for Automattic was similar, Fortune reported. A spokeswoman for WordPress declined to comment.

    WordPress powers the blogs at companies such as CNN.com and Techcrunch, a spokeswoman said.

    The investment bought out shares of existing shareholders, including early employees, rather than directly funding the company, wrote WordPress founder Matt Mullenweg in a blog post.

    “Allowing early investors to lock in some returns releases any short-term pressure there might be on the company for a liquidity event and allows us to focus fully on the long road ahead,” he wrote in his post.

    The investment is part of a crop of financing where nontraditional investors make bets on venture-capital backed companies. They include private-equity firms such as Riving Traverse Management, which last year led a $200 million funding round in payments service Square, and mutual funds such as T. Rowe Price, which has invested in companies including micro blog service Twitter.

    Many of these investors “come in with the ability to write checks larger than the entire size of most VCR funds,” wrote Mullenweg.

    More top blogs run Word Press than any other publishing platform, according to a 2012 study conducted by Kingdom, a website monitoring service. Blogs it cited in the study include technology sites such as Tech Crunch and Boingboing and Hollywood news site Deadline.

    While many organizations use Tumblr, it is heavily associated with individuals updating friends and others on their activities and interests, social-media style.

    And while Tumblr’s revenue is advertising based, the bulk of WordPress’s revenue comes from fees to users who upgrade beyond its basic free service. It also derives significant revenue from charging large media companies to host their entire blogging platforms, said Automattic Chief Financial Officer Stuart West in a telephone interview. He declined to disclose figures.

    Like Tumblr, WordPress is growing fast, with 50 million users today compared with 4 million five years ago, the company said. Tumblr launched five years ago and today has more than 100 million blogs in its network.

    The largest single audience group for WordPress is users aged 25-34, according to consultancy comScore. For Tumblr, the largest group is users aged 18-24.

    Earlier this year, Tiger led a $444 million equity investment in online survey company SurveyMonkey as part of a financing round that also allowed early investors and employees to cash out. Tiger partner Lee Fixel handled his firm’s investment in both SurveyMonkey and Automattic.

    Tiger extended its offer to WordPress in April, before Yahoo’s acquisition of Tumblr was announced, West said.

    Automattic’s venture backers include Polaris Partners, True Ventures, and the New York Times Co.

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  • Toshiba, KKR to Bid for Panasonic Healthcare Unit: Sources

    Toshiba Corp and U.S. private equity firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co (KKR) are among those expected to bid for Panasonic Corp’s healthcare business, sources told Reuters.

    (Reuters) – Toshiba Corp and U.S. private equity firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co (KKR) are among those expected to bid for Panasonic Corp’s healthcare business, financial sources with knowledge of the matter said.
    Panasonic is looking to raise as much as $1 billion by selling shares in the healthcare unit, whose products include blood sugar monitoring equipment, hearing aids and electronic medical record-keeping systems.

    The company, which is being advised by Bank of America Merrill Lynch on the sale, has set a deadline of Monday for first-round bids, according to the sources who spoke on condition of anonymity because the bidding is not public.

    Panasonic declined to comment on the sale process.

    About 10 investment funds, including KKR, Bain Capital, Carlyle Group, TPG Capital Management, CVC Capital Partners and Unison Capital are expected to enter bids, the sources said.

    Japanese electronics conglomerate Toshiba and a handful of manufacturers are also planning to bid, they said.
    Representatives of Toshiba and KKR declined to comment.

    Panasonic President Kazuhiro Tsuga said in March that he would seek a partner “with medical knowledge and skills and capital for future growth” to invest in the healthcare unit as part of a wider company revamp to bolster profitability.

    Tsuga did not say how much of the unit he planned to sell. The business generated a profit of 8.7 billion yen ($85.77 million) on 134.3 billion yen in sales in the previous business year ended in March.

    Investment funds are eyeing the growth potential of its blood sugar monitoring devices in markets such as China and India, while Toshiba sees the deal as a way to bolster its medical equipment operations, the sources said.

    The company is aiming to narrow the field to two or three bidders in June, conduct a second round of bidding in July and enter exclusive talks with one firm around August.

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  • 3i says to Buy Barclays Infrastructure Funds Management

    3i Group PLC is taking over the European infrastructure fund management business run by Barclays as part of a plan to boost fee income from public-private partnerships and energy investment projects, Reuters is reporting.

    (Reuters) – 3i Group PLC is taking over the European infrastructure fund management business run by Barclays as part of a plan to boost fee income from public-private partnerships and energy investment projects.

    The private equity firm, which is aiming to become one of Europe’s biggest investors in infrastructure, said the deal announced on Friday would complement its existing business at 3i Infrastructure and help it to raise new funds and source new investment opportunities.

    Barclays Infrastructure Funds Management Limited (BIFM) has around 780 million pounds ($1.2 billion) of assets under management and is run by an investment team based in London and Paris. Since its launch in 1996, the business has invested 1.7 billion pounds across six funds.

    Financial terms of the proposed transaction were not disclosed but the annual asset management fees earned by BIFM are expected to cover its operating costs, 3i said.

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  • Hulu Video Site Auction Attracts Four Bidders: Sources

    Former News Corp president Peter Chernin and private equity fund Guggenheim Digital Media have placed bids for Hulu, sources told Reuters, triggering a tug-of-war for the online video service.

    (Reuters) – Former News Corp president Peter Chernin and private equity fund Guggenheim Digital Media have placed bids for Hulu, two people with knowledge of the matter told Reuters, triggering a tug-of-war for the online video service.

    Satellite operator DirecTV and cable operator Time Warner Cable Inc also put in bids, one of the people told Reuters.

    Hulu was put on the auction block this year for the second time after disagreement between owners News Corp and Walt Disney Co on how best to operate a Web service that streams TV programs and other videos, Reuters previously reported.

    In April, Chernin placed a bid for $500 million, plus an unspecified additional sum to cover Hulu’s debt and programming commitments.

    Representatives of Guggenheim, Time Warner Cable and DirecTV had no comment. A spokesman for Chernin could not be reached.

    Hulu says on its website that it has more than 3 million subscribers paying $7.99 a month for its premium service and that it generated revenues of around $700 million last year. It sells advertising for its free service.

    It is being advised in the sale by Guggenheim Partners, a separately funded group from the digital media unit that placed the bid.

    The Los Angeles Times initially reported the bids On Thursday.

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  • Google, Like Facebook, in Talks to Buy Waze for About $1 Billion: Report

    Google Inc is considering buying Israeli mobile satellite navigation start-up Waze Inc, which may lead to a bidding war with Facebook Inc, Bloomberg news reported.

    (Reuters) – Google Inc is considering buying Israeli mobile satellite navigation start-up Waze Inc, which may lead to a bidding war with Facebook Inc, Bloomberg news reported, citing people familiar with the matter.

    Waze is seeking more than $1 billion and is fielding expressions of interest from multiple parties, said Bloomberg, citing a source.

    Other media have reported that Facebook Inc has held talks to buy Waze for as much as $1 billion.

    Google and other parties approached Waze after the Facebook talks became public but none of the bidders are close to clinching a deal, Bloomberg said, adding that the start-up might decide to remain independent.

    Waze could not immediately be reached for comment. Google did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

    Waze uses satellite signals from members’ smartphones to generate maps and traffic data, which it then shares with other users, offering real-time traffic info.

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  • Blackstone, Prologis Pay $960 Mln for Warehouses-Sources

    Blackstone Group LP and Prologis Inc have agreed to buy a portfolio of 17 million square feet of warehouse and distribution centers whose majority owner is Lehman Brothers for about $960 million, sources tell Reuters.

    NEW YORK, May 22 (Reuters) – Blackstone Group LP and Prologis Inc have agreed to buy a portfolio of 17 million square feet of warehouse and distribution centers whose majority owner is Lehman Brothers for about $960 million, two sources familiar with the deal said on Wednesday.

    Under the deal, Blackstone’s IndCor Properties Inc will operate about 9.5 million square feet of properties in Reno, Nevada. Prologis will buy the remaining properties that are chiefly in Pennsylvania and some in Las Vegas, the sources said.

    The sources did not want to be named because they were not authorized to speak on the record about the pending deal.

    Through a series of deals dating back to 2010, Blackstone will have a portfolio of about 100 million square feet of warehouse and distribution centers, managed under IndCor. That makes Blackstone one of the top three owners of warehouse and distribution centers, typically referred to as industrial real estate. IndCor’s chief executive is Tim Beaudin, the former executive vice president of Catellus Development Corp, which Prologis acquired in 2008.

    If Blackstone chooses to take IndCor public, the IPO is not likely to happen this year, one source said.
    The deal for the properties, comes after Blackstone announced on Monday it would buy 4 million square feet of warehouse and distribution centers from First Potomac Realty Trust for $241.5 million.

    Within the past three years, Blackstone has digested big bites of the industrial real estate sector. Last year, it paid $770 million for 65 U.S. properties owned by Australia’s Dexus Property Group. It also took control of about 95 warehouse and distribution centers, a mostly California-portfolio known as CalWest, from Walton Street Capital LLC by buying the debt on the portfolio.

    Rent and occupancy in the U.S. industrial real estate sector have been slowly improving over the past few years, with occupancy picking up at a more rapid rate over the past few quarters, Green Street analyst John Stewart said.

    “However, the run up in asset values is definitely outstripping the improvement in fundamentals,” he said. “It says we are in a low-return world.”
    Lehman first became involved in the property in 2007 when it agreed to provide about $1.5 billion in the form of a debt and equity loan to Prologis – then known as ProLogis – to acquire the properties known as the Dermody industrial portfolio. But the investment bank got stuck with the majority of the properties during the credit crisis. Lehman got stuck with 80 percent of the portfolio, and Prologis 20 percent.

    Representatives from Blackstone declined to comment, and San Francisco-based Prologis was not immediately available to comment. Brokers from Eastdil Secured marketed the portfolio, which attracted “robust” interest, one source said.

    This week, Lehman, which emerged from bankruptcy last year, continued its efforts to repay creditors, raising $1.88 billion selling claims it had against its former brokerage.

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  • Building Products Maker CPG Hires Banks for $1.5 Bln Sale-Sources

    Building products maker CPG International is being prepared for a sale by its private equity owner, a deal that could fetch between $1 billion and $1.5 billion, sources tell Reuters.

    NEW YORK, May 22 (Reuters) – Building products maker CPG International is being prepared for a sale by its private equity owner, a deal that could fetch between $1 billion and $1.5 billion, according to three people familiar with the matter.

    Buyout firm AEA Investors LP has hired Barclays and Deutsche Bank to find a buyer for CPG, which makes building supplies for residential and commercial markets such as outdoor decking and porch boards, the people said on Wednesday.

    The company, which was acquired by AEA Investors in 2005 for an undisclosed sum, is expected to start conversations with potential buyers in the next few weeks that could include private equity firms as well as industry rivals, said one of the people.

    They asked not to be identified because the sale process is not public. Representatives for AEA Investors did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Barclays and Deutsche Bank declined to comment.

    The potential sale of CPG comes as investors are looking to capitalize on a rebound in the U.S. housing market, which was hit hard by the turmoil in the U.S. credit market in late 2007. Low interest rates and rising rents have pushed many consumers to buy homes, boosting the outlook for the housing and building products markets.
    Headquartered in Scranton, Pennsylvania, CPG International makes synthetic construction and building products to replace wood, metal and other materials, according to its website.

    Its products include deck, trim, rail molding; bathroom partitions, lockers and industrial plastic sheet products. They are sold under several brands such as AZEK Building Products, Santana Products and Comtec Industries.

    Founded in 1968, AEA focuses on investing in middle-market companies in the industrial products, specialty chemicals, consumer products and services industries.

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  • Insurer, Buyout Firm in Talks to Buy Lender Processing: Source

    Title insurer Fidelity National Financial Inc and buyout firm Thomas H. Lee Partners are in advanced talks to acquire mortgage service provider Lender Processing Services Inc, Reuters reports.

    (Reuters) – Title insurer Fidelity National Financial Inc (FNF.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) and buyout firm Thomas H. Lee Partners are in advanced talks to acquire mortgage service provider Lender Processing Services Inc (LPS.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), a source familiar with the matter said.

    The deal, worth about $2.9 billion, would value Lender Processing shares at around $33 per share, the Wall Street Journal reported earlier on Wednesday, citing people familiar with the matter.

    The buyers would pay with a mix of cash and Fidelity National Financial stock, the paper said, adding that Thomas H. Lee would hold a 19.9 percent stake in Lender Processing.

    The deal could be announced as soon as early next week, the source told Reuters.

    Fidelity National and Lender Processing Services were not immediately available for comment. Thomas H. Lee declined to comment.

    If the deal is completed, Lender Processing Services would become a subsidiary of Fidelity National Financial, the Wall Street Journal said.

    Shares of Lender Processing closed down 3.2 percent at $29.11 on Wednesday on the New York Stock Exchange, while those of Fidelity National Financial were down 4 percent at $24.37.

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  • Reuters – Fisker Fields $20m offer from Bob Lutz, Wanxiang

    A team including former General Motors Co executive Bob Lutz and China’s largest parts maker is looking to buy Fisker Automotive for $20 million, a fraction of the “green” car company’s estimated worth almost a year and a half ago, writes Reuters. In the spring of 2012, Fisker competed a fundraising round that valued the company at $2.2 billion.

    Reuters – A team including former General Motors Co (GM.N) executive Bob Lutz and China’s largest parts maker is looking to buy Fisker Automotive for $20 million, a fraction of the “green” car company’s estimated worth almost a year and a half ago.

    People familiar with the matter said on Wednesday that VL Automotive, a venture between Lutz and industrialist Gilbert Villarreal, and China’s Wanxiang Group submitted the bid earlier this month to buy Fisker through a prepackaged bankruptcy deal.

    This is one of at least two investor groups looking to gain control of Fisker, which has not built a car since July. Earlier this year, the company hired bankruptcy advisers and fired the bulk of its staff, while continuing to seek a buyer.

    VL Automotive, Lutz and Pin Ni, president of Wanxiang’s U.S. division, declined to comment. Representatives for Fisker did not immediately comment.

    The $20 million bid is a far cry from Fisker’s estimated value during the launch of its flagship Karma plug-in hybrid sports car. In December 2011, Fisker told prospective investors that its total capitalization was “approaching” $2 billion, according to an investor document filing obtained by Reuters.

    In the spring of 2012, Fisker competed a fundraising round that valued the company at $2.2 billion, according to regulatory filings analyzed by venture capital data provider VC Experts.

    VL Automotive is building a car called the Destino, which has the shell of a Fisker Karma with the powertrain of a Chevrolet Corvette. Wanxiang bought Fisker’s battery supplier out of bankruptcy, a deal that was approved by a U.S. judge this year.

    Since its founding in 2007, Fisker has raised $1.2 billion in private funds. The company won a $529 million U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) loan, but the department halted payments in mid-2011 after Fisker missed certain performance milestones.

    Fisker now owes the DOE about $171 million in loans. A separate team of investors is looking to buy out the DOE’s position in Fisker at a discount, sources previously said.

    The DOE declined to comment.

    (Reporting by Deepa Seetharaman in Detroit and Norihiko Shirouzu in Tokyo; additional reporting by Ben Klayman in Detroit; Editing by Chris Reese, Bernard Orr)

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  • Reuters – Just Dial’s $170 mln IPO Covered 11.6 times

    Indian local search service provider Just Dial Ltd‘s up to $170 million initial public offer was subscribed 11.6 times on closing in what is the biggest IPO in the country so far this year, writes Reuters. The response to the equity offering signals strong investor appetite for new shares, although bankers said this would unlikely open up the moribund IPO market in the near term with few medium-to-large sized issues in the pipeline, writes Reuters.

    Reuters – Indian local search service provider Just Dial Ltd’s up to $170 million initial public offer was subscribed 11.6 times on closing on Wednesday, in what is the biggest IPO in the country so far this year.

    The response to the equity offering signals strong investor appetite for new shares, although bankers said this would unlikely open up the moribund IPO market in the near term with few medium-to-large sized issues in the pipeline.

    Just Dial’s IPO, in which the company’s founders and private equity investors including Sequoia Capital and Tiger Globe sold some of their shares, is the biggest since Bharti Infratel Ltd’s about $750 million IPO in December last year.

    Although 12 IPOs were launched in the Indian market in the first quarter this year, all raised less than $100 million each.

    Investors in Mumbai-based Just Dial, which offers search for local businesses through Internet and mobile platforms, were selling 17.5 million shares through the IPO in an indicative price band of between 470 rupees and 543 rupees apiece.

    Just Dial is benefiting from rising income levels in Asia’s third-largest economy that also has the world’s second-highest number of mobile phone connections. Cheaper smartphones have helped fast growth in Internet usage.

    Citigroup, which topped the Indian equity market league table as bookrunner in the first quarter of this year, and Morgan Stanley were the lead managers for the Just Dial issue.

    Just Dial had first filed papers with the regulators for an IPO in 2011, but shelved the issue due to a sharp fall in the markets that affected appetite for new shares. ($1 = 55.2850 rupees) (Reporting by Devidutta Tripathy and Sumeet Chatterjee; Editing by Anand Basu)

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