Author: Reuters News

  • Reuters – Qatar to Launch New $12bn Investment Firm

    Qatar Holding, a unit of the Gulf Arab state’s sovereign wealth fund, will launch a new investment firm worth $12 billion to purchase assets globally, writes Reuters. Qatar Holding vice-chairman, Hussain al-Abdullah, who is also a board member of Qatar Investment Authority, said the company would be listed on the Doha stock exchange in six to eight weeks.

    Reuters – Qatar Holding, a unit of the Gulf Arab state’s sovereign wealth fund, will launch a new investment firm worth $12 billion to purchase assets globally, a top official said on Tuesday.

    Qatar Holding vice-chairman, Hussain al-Abdullah, who is also a board member of Qatar Investment Authority (QIA), said the company would be listed on the Doha stock exchange in six to eight weeks.

    “You name it – shares, bonds, real estate, private equity. We will look at every sector in every country around the world,” he told reporters in the Qatari capital.

    Qatar Holding is the investment arm of the gas-rich state’s sovereign wealth fund. With an investment appetite of about $30 billion a year, QIA has picked up stakes in high-profile Western assets such as miner Xstrata, automakers Volkswagen and Porsche, and luxury retailer Harrods.

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  • Reuters – Blackstone Sticks with SAC Capital

    Blackstone Group, one of the world’s most powerful hedge fund investors, is largely sticking with Steven A. Cohen’s SAC Capital Advisors but has negotiated more favorable liquidity terms, spokesman Peter Rose said in a statement. The news came on the day investors had to notify Cohen’s $14 billion fund whether they were sticking with him or leaving as the firm faces heightened scrutiny in the government’s insider trading investigation, Reuters wrote.

    (Reuters) – Blackstone Group, one of the world’s most powerful hedge fund investors, is largely sticking with Steven A. Cohen’s SAC Capital Advisors but has negotiated more favorable liquidity terms, spokesman Peter Rose said in a statement.

    The news came on the day investors had to notify Cohen’s $14 billion fund whether they were sticking with him or leaving as the firm faces heightened scrutiny in the government’s insider trading investigation.

    Sources said Blackstone had roughly $550 million invested with SAC, making it the largest outside investor in Cohen’s fund.

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  • Reuters – Best Buy Founder May Scrap Buyout Bid

    Best Buy co-founder Richard Schulze may scrap a buyout bid and instead line up investors to take a minority position in the electronics retailer, writes Reuters. Schulze originally informed the board last August that he was interested in teaming up with private equity partners to buy the company.

    Reuters – Best Buy Co Inc (BBY.N) founder Richard Schulze may scrap a buyout bid and instead line up investors to take a minority position in the electronics retailer, sources familiar with the situation said on Wednesday.

    The latest twist in Schulze’s months-long quest came two weeks before the deadline set by Best Buy for him to make a bid for the company he founded in 1966.

    Schulze originally informed the board last August that he was interested in teaming up with private equity partners to buy the company. He has been unable to get enough support from banks to finance a deal to take it private, three sources said.

    He is in preliminary talks with investors to take a minority stake in the chain that would be separate from his own existing position of about 20 percent, two of those sources said.

    Schulze said in August that he could acquire Best Buy for $24 to $26 per share, valuing the deal between $8.16 billion and $8.84 billion and if debt was included as much as $10.9 billion.

    “We believe the equity raise required for this deal would be a major challenge for Mr. Schulze given the potential size of the deal and the structural challenges facing the company,” RBC Capital Markets analyst Scot Ciccarelli said. “With that in mind, it doesn’t come as a surprise to us that Mr. Schulze is considering alternatives to his original plan.”

    Best Buy declined to comment on the news, first reported by The Wall Street Journal. Its shares tumbled more than 10 percent on the initial report, then bounced off session lows to close down 2 percent at $15.12 on the New York Stock Exchange.

    Best Buy forced out Schulze’s protégé, Brian Dunn, as chief executive last year amid allegations he was having an inappropriate relationship with a female employee.

    That scandal led to the ouster of Schulze from the board. Best Buy hired restructuring expert Hubert Joly as CEO to turn around the company. Schulze remains Best Buy’s largest shareholder.

    Best Buy, which has struggled to fend off its discount and online rivals, showed the first concrete signs of a turnaround in its U.S. stores recently when it reported flat same-store sales during the holiday season.

    (Reporting By Jessica Toonkel, Dhanya Skariachan and Olivia Oran; Writing by Ben Berkowitz and Dhanya Skariachan Editing by Andre Grenon, Leslie Adler and David Gregorio)

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  • Reuters – 3SBio to Go Private in $340M Deal

    Chinese biotechnology firm 3SBio Inc. said it agreed to be bought by Decade Sunshine Ltd. for about $340 million, Reuters reported. The offer of $15.40 per American Depositary Shares is at a premium of about 12 percent to the ADS’s Thursday close of $13.79.

    (Reuters) – Chinese biotechnology firm 3SBio Inc said it agreed to be bought by Decade Sunshine Ltd for about $340 million.

    The offer of $15.40 per American Depositary Shares (ADS) is at a premium of about 12 percent to the ADS’s Thursday close of $13.79.

    3SBio Chief Executive Jing Lou had offered to take the company private for up to $15 per ADS, or about $331 million, last September.

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  • Morgan Stanley in Talks to Invest in India Office Development

    The global real estate fund of Morgan Stanley is in talks with the Wadhwa Group to invest 9 billion to 10 billion rupees ($168-$186 million) in an office development in India’s financial capital of Mumbai, three sources familiar with the matter told Reuters. Morgan Stanley Real Estate Investing plans to invest in jointly developing 1.6 million square feet of office space in Bandra Kurla Complex, a financial district in Mumbai, said two of the sources on condition of anonymity as the deal is not yet final. Mumbai-based Wadhwa Group has already begun construction on the project, ONE BKC, which will consist of two office towers and is due to be completed by 2014.

    (Reuters) – The global real estate fund of Morgan Stanley is in talks with the Wadhwa Group to invest 9 billion to 10 billion rupees ($168-$186 million) in an office development in India’s financial capital of Mumbai, three sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.

    Morgan Stanley Real Estate Investing (MSREI) plans to invest in jointly developing 1.6 million square feet of office space in Bandra Kurla Complex, a financial district in Mumbai, said two of the sources on condition of anonymity as the deal is not yet final.

    Mumbai-based Wadhwa Group has already begun construction on the project, ONE BKC, which will consist of two office towers and is due to be completed by 2014.

    If the deal is concluded it would be the first investment by MSREI in an office development in India, said one source.

    MSREI has invested about $850 million in Indian real estate, mainly in residential projects, including $100 million to $125 million in a housing project by Mumbai-based Sheth Developers, Reuters reported in December 2011.

    MSREI and the Wadhwa Group declined to comment.

    Private equity investors have been cautious about the Indian real estate market, investing $1.95 billion in 2012 compared with $9.8 billion in 2007, according to data from research firm Venture Intelligence.

    On Thursday, Reuters reported that U.S. private-equity firm Blackstone Group, along with two other companies, agreed to buy a business park in Bangalore for $367 million, citing two sources with direct knowledge of the matter.

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  • Reuters – PE Owners Sell Stake in TDC

    The main owners of Danish telecom operator TDC have agreed to sell shares in the company worth about 3.28 billion Danish crowns ($588.67 million) at recent prices, Reuters wrote. NTC Holding – a consortium of investment Apax Partners, the Blackstone Group LP, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, Permira Advisers and Providence Equity Partners – will sell 80 million shares, or about 10 percent of TDC’s share capital, TDC said in a statement late on Thursday. The former state-owned monopoly operator said it will not receive any of the proceeds of the accelerated offering.

    (Reuters) – The main owners of Danish telecom operator TDC have agreed to sell shares in the company worth about 3.28 billion Danish crowns ($588.67 million) at recent prices.

    NTC Holding – a consortium of investment Apax Partners, the Blackstone Group LP, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, Permira Advisers and Providence Equity Partners – will sell 80 million shares, or about 10 percent of TDC’s share capital, TDC said in a statement late on Thursday.

    The former state-owned monopoly operator said it will not receive any of the proceeds of the accelerated offering.

    Order books on the sale, for which UBS is acting as bookrunner, are expected to close on Feb. 8.

    NTC bought nearly 89 percent of TDC in the autumn of 2005 and sold 28.8 percent of the stock in one of the biggest share offerings of 2010 for around $2.2 billion.

    NTC has since reduced its stake several times. After the latest sale in November last year they reduced their ownership to 25.9 percent.

    ($1 = 5.5719 Danish crowns) (Reporting by Johan Ahlander)

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  • Reuters – Michael Dell Ponies Up $750M in Cash for Deal

    Michael Dell and his investment firm are ponying up $750 million in cash toward the $24.4 billion purchase of Dell Inc. to help bankroll the largest private equity-backed buyout since the financial crisis, Reuters wrote. The Dell founder and CEO this week struck a deal to take private the company he created out of a college dorm room in 1984, partnering with private equity house Silver Lake and Microsoft Corp. Michael Dell will contribute $500 million of his own cash, and MSDC Management – an affiliate of his investment vehicle, MSD Capital – will contribute another $250 million, according to a company filing on Wednesday.

    (Reuters) – Michael Dell and his investment firm are ponying up $750 million in cash toward the $24.4 billion purchase of Dell Inc to help bankroll the largest private equity-backed buyout since the financial crisis.

    The Dell founder and CEO this week struck a deal to take private the company he created out of a college dorm room in 1984, partnering with private equity house Silver Lake and Microsoft Corp.

    Michael Dell will contribute $500 million of his own cash, and MSDC Management – an affiliate of his investment vehicle, MSD Capital – will contribute another $250 million, according to a company filing on Wednesday.

    Dell Inc also said it is targeting the repatriation of $7.4 billion of cash now parked abroad to help finance the deal. That may dismay some shareholders, as a hefty tax is usually levied on cash brought back from overseas.

    The deal, which ends Dell’s rocky 24-year run on the Nasdaq just as the once-dominant PC maker struggles to revive growth, is contingent on approval by a majority of shareholders — excluding Michael Dell himself.

    Several shareholders, including prominent investor Frederick “Shad” Rowe of Greenbrier Partners, have spoken out against the deal, protesting a lack of specifics as well as a potential conflict of interest with Michael Dell being the company’s single largest shareholder with a roughly 16 percent stake.

    “Some shareholders are glad. But there are others who feel it’s a raw deal,” said Shaw Wu, an analyst with Sterne Agee, who has spoken with several Dell shareholders since the announcement but declined to provide further details.

    AND SO IT BEGINS

    Dell was regarded as a model of innovation as recently as the early 2000s, pioneering online ordering of custom PCs and working closely with Asian suppliers and manufacturers to assure rock-bottom production costs. But it missed the big industry shift to tablet computers, smartphones and high-powered consumer electronics such as music players and gaming consoles.

    Executives said on Tuesday the company will stick to a strategy of expanding its software and services offerings for large companies, with the goal of becoming a provider of corporate computing services – like the highly profitable IBM . They played down speculation the company may spin off the low-margin PC business on which it made its name.

    The company has not given many specifics on what it would do differently as a private entity, angering some shareholders who said they needed more information to determine whether the $13.65-a-share deal price – a 25 percent premium to Dell’s stock price before buyout talks leaked in January – was adequate.

    On Wednesday, an individual shareholder filed the first lawsuit, in Delaware, attempting to stop the buyout. The lawsuit – which is seeking class-action status – maintains that the $13.65 per share offered sharply underestimated the company’s long-term prospects.

    “By engaging in the going private transaction now – in the midst of the company’s transition from a PC vendor to full service software and enterprise solution provider – the board is allowing defendants M. Dell and Silver Lake to obtain Dell on the cheap,” read the lawsuit filed by Catherine Christner.

    Dell, the world’s No. 3 personal computer maker, broke down details of the equity and debt financing secured for the buyout in Wednesday’s filing.

    Silver Lake is putting up $1.4 billion, while banks including Bank of America, Barclays, Credit Suisse and RBC will provide roughly $16 billion in term loans and other forms of financing.

    Wednesday’s filing also disclosed that under certain circumstances if the merger cannot be completed, Michael Dell and Silver Lake could have to pay a termination fee of up to $750 million to the company.

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  • Reuters – Kazakhstan Sovereign Wealth Fund Buys Stake in Kazzinc

    Kazakhstan’s sovereign wealth fund, Samruk-Kazyna, has acquired a 29 percent stake in Glencore-controlled zinc producer Kazzinc, the fund’s deputy head said on Thursday, without disclosing the price, Reuters reported. Glencore, which owns 69.61 percent in Kazzinc, had earlier said it intended to boost its stake in the company to 93 percent for a total of $3.2 billion, including $2.2 billion in cash and $1 billion in equity.

    (Reuters) – Kazakhstan’s sovereign wealth fund, Samruk-Kazyna, has acquired a 29 percent stake in Glencore-controlled zinc producer Kazzinc, the fund’s deputy head said on Thursday, without disclosing the price.

    “The Kazzinc deal is closed, and today we own 29 percent in this enterprise,” Kuandyk Bishimbayev told reporters. “These were borrowed funds,” he added without giving further detail.

    He said the shares had been bought from Kazakh company Verny Capital.

    Glencore, which owns 69.61 percent in Kazzinc, had earlier said it intended to boost its stake in the company to 93 percent for a total of $3.2 billion, including $2.2 billion in cash and $1 billion in equity.

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  • Reuters – Blackstone Buys Indian Business Park

    U.S. private equity firm Blackstone Group, along with two other companies, have agreed to buy a business park in south India for 19.5 billion rupees ($367 million), two sources with direct knowledge told Reuters. The deal, which is expected to be concluded within two to three months according to the sources, would be the largest private equity investment by value in India’s real estate sector since 2008.

    (Reuters) – U.S. private equity firm Blackstone Group (BX.N), along with two other companies, have agreed to buy a business park in south India for 19.5 billion rupees ($367 million), two sources with direct knowledge told Reuters.

    The deal, which is expected to be concluded within two to three months according to the sources, would be the largest private equity investment by value in India’s real estate sector since 2008.

    Blackstone, a property fund founded by Housing Development Finance Corporation (HDFC.NS) and unlisted real estate developer Embassy Group plan to invest an equal amount to buy Vrindavan Tech Village, a special economic zone on the outskirts of Bangalore in the southern state of Karnataka, one source said on condition of anonymity as the deal is not yet finalized.

    The facility, built by Singapore-based developer Assetz Property Group, is spread across 106 acres of which about 20 acres have been developed into 1.9 million square feet of offices occupied by companies that include Cisco (CSCO.O), Sony Corp (6758.T) and Nokia (NOK1V.HE).

    On the remaining acres, Embassy plans to build homes on 30 acres and about 5 million to 6 million square feet of offices on the rest, said the source.

    Real estate made up about a quarter of Blackstone’s total global assets under management of $210 billion at the end of December, and is its most profitable business.

    In India, Blackstone has invested nearly $600 million in commercial assets over the past two years, making it one of the largest private equity investors in the country.

    Blackstone, Embassy and Assetz declined to comment. HDFC did not respond to messages. ($1 = 53.1250 Indian rupees)

    (Editing by Ranjit Gangadharan)

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  • Reuters – China Development Bank Approves Loan for LDK Solar

    LDK Solar Co Ltd said China Development Bank Corp approved a loan of 440 million yuan ($71 million), adding to the billions of dollars Chinese state-run banks have already provided to support the country’s solar industry, Reuters reported. LDK shares were up 8.4 percent at $1.67 in afternoon trading on the New York Stock Exchange. The loan will be used to finance LDK’s investment in hydrochlorination technology for the Mahong polysilicon plant in Jiangxi province, in which LDK has invested more than 12 billion yuan to date.

    (Reuters) – LDK Solar Co Ltd said China Development Bank Corp approved a loan of 440 million yuan ($71 million), adding to the billions of dollars Chinese state-run banks have already provided to support the country’s solar industry.

    LDK shares were up 8.4 percent at $1.67 in afternoon trading on the New York Stock Exchange.

    The loan will be used to finance LDK’s investment in hydrochlorination technology for the Mahong polysilicon plant in Jiangxi province, in which LDK has invested more than 12 billion yuan to date.

    LDK said last month that it was working to address liquidity and working capital concerns and entered into discussions with certain creditors to obtain additional flexibility.

    The company plans to draw down on the loan as market conditions improve and the necessary equipment is ready for its use, it said on Thursday.

    The government of Xinyu city in Jiangxi province said in July it would repay some loans of the company, which is based in the city.

    The company early last week said it would sell a 12 percent stake to Fulai Investments Ltd (FIL) for $31.1 million.

    FIL, whose sole director and shareholder is Hong Kong-based Cheng Kin Ming, is primarily in the investment business.

    As per the deal, FIL can designate two non-executive directors to the LDK board upon closing, which is expected before Feb. 28.

    LDK sold a 19.9 stake to state-backed Heng Rui Xin Energy in October.

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  • Reuters- University Endowments Down in FY2012

    U.S. college and university endowments posted an average loss of 0.3 percent for fiscal 2012, a sharp reversal from a gain of 19.2 percent a year earlier, pressured by volatile international equity markets, according to a study released on Friday. Institutions with the biggest endowments reported the highest returns, according to a study by Commonfund Institute and the National Association of College and University Business Officers, Reuters wrote. For the fiscal year ended June 30, 2012, endowments of more than $1 billion had the best returns, with a gain of 0.8 percent. The lowest rate of return was for endowments with assets between $51 million and $100 million, at a loss of 1.0 percent, the study showed.

    (Reuters) – U.S. college and university endowments posted an average loss of 0.3 percent for fiscal 2012, a sharp reversal from a gain of 19.2 percent a year earlier, pressured by volatile international equity markets, according to a study released on Friday.

    Institutions with the biggest endowments reported the highest returns, according to a study by Commonfund Institute and the National Association of College and University Business Officers (NACUBO).

    For the fiscal year ended June 30, 2012, endowments of more than $1 billion had the best returns, with a gain of 0.8 percent. The lowest rate of return was for endowments with assets between $51 million and $100 million, at a loss of 1.0 percent, the study showed.

    “It was a very bad year for international equities; you had China slowing down, euro zone problems, so it had a very negative impact on equities outside the United States, that was a big drag on those portfolios exposed,” Verne Sedlacek, president and chief executive of Commonfund, told a press conference.

    The study was based on data from 831 U.S. institutions with endowment market assets totaling $406.1 billion.

    Over the last 10 years, endowments generated average annualized returns of 6.2 percent, out-performing the 5.5 percent gain posted by Standard & Poor Index for the same period, Sedlacek said. Those returns, however, still trail institutions’ average long-term target rate of 7.4 percent.

    “The 6.2 percent sounds pretty good, but actually over the last 10 years, with the financial crisis, with the recession, universities have lost ground when you adjust for inflation,” Sedlacek added.

    Longer-dated fixed-income investments generated the highest return with an average of 6.8 percent, while international equities produced a loss of 11.8 percent.

    While endowments with assets over $1 billion reported the smallest fixed income allocation, at 9 percent, they realized the highest return from this asset class, an average of 9.1 percent, the report showed. Endowments with assets under $25 million benefited from the largest fixed income allocation, at 29 percent, despite reporting the lowest return, an average of 6.1 percent.

    International equity markets were the biggest drag on all the institutions, large and small. All groups, from those with assets under $25 million to those with over $1 billion reported losses ranging from 13.2 percent to minus 10.5 percent in their international equity allocations.

    In alternative strategies, which returned just 0.5 percent, private equity showed the largest return, at 5.1 percent, compared with 18.7 percent in the previous fiscal year.

    Marketable alternatives, also known as hedge funds, showed a loss of 1.2 percent compared with a 9.4 percent return the previous fiscal year. Commodities also disappointed.

    “You would think that in a year with a relatively flat stock market that hedge funds should do pretty well relative to the U.S. market, and that was not the case in fiscal 2012,” Sedlacek said, adding that hedge funds are active stock pickers and they did poorly relative to a passive approach.

    The effective spending rate, or the percentage of an endowment’s value at the beginning of the year allocated for operating expenses, was 4.2 percent for the 2012 fiscal year, compared with 4.6 percent the previous period, while decreases in gifts and donations to endowments have been a cause for concern in the aftermath of the 2008-09 financial crisis.

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  • Reuters – Dell Nears Buyout Deal

    Dell Inc. is nearing an agreement to sell itself to a buyout consortium led by its founder and Chief Executive Michael Dell and private equity firm Silver Lake Partners, possibly announcing a deal as soon as Monday, Reuters reported, citing two people familiar with the matter. Michael Dell is expected to take majority ownership of the world’s third-largest personal computer maker, which currently has a market value of $23 billion, while Silver Lake and Microsoft Corp. would become minority investors, a third person familiar with the matter said. The final price the group is expected to pay Dell shareholders could not be immediately learned. The deal would mark the largest leveraged buyout since the global financial crisis.

    (Reuters) – Dell Inc is nearing an agreement to sell itself to a buyout consortium led by its founder and Chief Executive Michael Dell and private equity firm Silver Lake Partners, possibly announcing a deal as soon as Monday, according to two people familiar with the matter.

    Michael Dell is expected to take majority ownership of the world’s third-largest personal computer maker, which currently has a market value of $23 billion, while Silver Lake and Microsoft Corp would become minority investors, a third person familiar with the matter said.

    The final price the group is expected to pay Dell shareholders could not be immediately learned. The deal would mark the largest leveraged buyout since the global financial crisis.

    The transaction is set to be finalized over the weekend but the buyout consortium is working on last-minute details and the timetable could still slip, the people cautioned, asking not to be named because the matter is not public.

    The investment group, which held negotiations with Dell’s camp in New York on Thursday, has secured up to $15 billion of debt financing to take Dell private from four investment banks — Barclays, Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Credit Suisse and RBC Capital, people familiar with the matter said.

    Barclays is also advising Silver Lake on the transaction, along with Perella Weinberg Partners, said two of the people. JPMorgan Chase & Co is advising Dell.

    Representatives for Dell, Microsoft and Barclays declined to comment. Silver Lake and Perella Weinberg could not be immediately reached for comment.

    As part of the transaction, Michael Dell will contribute his existing stake of almost 16 percent in the company toward gaining majority ownership, sources close to the matter have said.

    Going private would allow Dell, which has been trying to become a one-stop shop for corporate technology needs as the PC market shrinks, to conduct that difficult makeover away from public scrutiny.

    Dell has formed a special committee of its independent directors and hired Evercore Partners Inc to assess whether the company is getting the best deal for shareholders and not one that is just in the best interest of Michael Dell, several people familiar with the matter have told Reuters previously.

    (Additional reporting by Poornima Gupta in San Francisco and Bill Rigby in Seattle; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)

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  • Reuters – Kinder Morgan Pays $3.22B for Copano Energy

    Kinder Morgan Energy Partners LP will buy natural gas pipeline operator Copano Energy LLC for $3.22 billion to tap into growing demand for infrastructure to transport vast supplies from the shale fields of Texas and Oklahoma. Private equity firm TPG Capital, Copano’s top shareholder with a stake of more than 14 percent, will get a 41 percent premium to its $300 million investment made in 2010, if the deal goes through, Reuters reported.

    (Reuters) – Kinder Morgan Energy Partners LP will buy natural gas pipeline operator Copano Energy LLC for $3.22 billion to tap into growing demand for infrastructure to transport vast supplies from the shale fields of Texas and Oklahoma.

    Private equity firm TPG Capital, Copano’s top shareholder with a stake of more than 14 percent, will get a 41 percent premium to its $300 million investment made in 2010, if the deal goes through.

    The deal is the latest in a flurry of multi-billion-dollar takeovers in the U.S. pipeline industry over the past two years as companies rush to cash in on a shortage of pipelines to move gas and gas liquids such as ethane and propane.

    The oversupply of gas and gas liquids, largely due to the advent of new drilling methods such as hydraulic fracturing, has also hurt prices.

    Many companies have announced plans to build new pipelines, but stricter regulations and environmental concerns have delayed the completion of several projects.

    “Copano is already executing on a substantial backlog of expansion projects for which it has secured customer commitments and is exploring a significant amount of projects incremental to these,” said Kinder Morgan Chief Executive Richard Kinder.

    Kinder is also the chief executive and co-founder of Kinder Morgan Inc, which sold its Tennessee Gas Pipeline and a 50 percent stake in El Paso Natural Gas pipeline to Kinder Morgan Energy for about $6.22 billion in August.

    Kinder Morgan in May won U.S. approval for its $23 billion acquisition of rival El Paso Corp.

    Kinder Morgan Energy said late on Tuesday it would offer 0.4563 of its unit for each share of Copano. The ratio translates into a price of $40.91 per share – a 23.5 percent premium to Copano’s Tuesday close of $33.13.

    Thomson Reuters StarMine’s intrinsic valuation model suggests Copano should be trading at $22.44. The models take into account analyst estimates for growth, usually over five years, and then model the typical growth trajectory of companies over a longer period of time.

    Shares of Houston-based Kinder Morgan Energy closed at $89.66 on Tuesday on the New York Stock Exchange.

    Including debt, the total deal value is about $5 billion, Kinder Morgan Energy said.

    “As a result of this acquisition, we will be able to pursue incremental development in the Eagle Ford Shale play in south Texas, gain entry into the Barnett Shale Combo in north Texas and the Mississippi Lime and Woodford Shales in Oklahoma,” CEO Kinder said.

    Copano owns an interest in or operates about 6,900 miles of pipelines with capacity of 2.7 billion cubic feet per day (bcf/d) of gas and nine processing plants with more than 1 bcf/d capacity.

    Kinder Morgan Energy owns an interest in or runs about 46,000 miles of pipelines that transport gas, gasoline, crude oil and other products, while its 180 terminals store petroleum products, chemicals and such other products.

    The acquisition will add at least 10 cents per unit to Kinder Morgan Energy’s earnings for at least the next five years beginning 2014, the company said.

    Kinder Morgan Energy said TPG, to which Copano had sold 10.33 million convertible preferred units at $29.05 each, has agreed to support the deal, which is expected to close in the third quarter.

    Kinder Morgan Energy expects to retain the “vast majority” of 415 people employed by Copano, which was founded in 1992 by John Eckel Jr, who served as its chief executive until his death in November 2009.

    Citi advised Kinder Morgan Energy, while Weil Gotshal & Manges LLP and Bracewell & Giuliani acted as legal counsel. Barclays Capital Inc and Jefferies & Co Inc were the financial advisers to Copano, with Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz acting as its legal counsel. (By Krishna N Das)

  • Reuters – Compuware Turns Down Buyout Offer

    Business software maker Compuware Corp. turned down hedge fund Elliott Management Corp‘s proposal for a $2.3 billion buyout, choosing instead to proceed with spinning off a non-core unit, Reuters reported. Paul Singer’s Elliott Management had offered in December to buy Compuware for $11 per share, raising questions about the management of the company.

    (Reuters) – Business software maker Compuware Corp. turned down hedge fund Elliott Management Corp’s proposal for a $2.3 billion buyout, choosing instead to proceed with spinning off a non-core unit.

    Paul Singer’s Elliott Management had offered in December to buy Compuware for $11 per share, raising questions about the management of the company.

    Elliott’s proposal significantly undervalues the company and is not in the best interest of shareholders, Compuware said in a statement.

    Elliott had blamed Compuware for underperforming its potential and promised to turn it around if the deal went through.

    Compuware said it would rather proceed with the IPO of its Covisint unit and cut costs.

    The company, which filed for a possible Covisint IPO last year, is expected to sell a 20 percent interest in the offering and distribute the rest among its shareholders.

    Eliott had declared an 8 percent economic interest in Compuware when it made the offer last year. According to the latest filing, it beneficially owns 14.2 million shares, or 6.6 percent of the outstanding shares.

    Compuware also approved an annual dividend of 50 cents per share starting from the first quarter of fiscal 2014, which begins in April.

    Compuware shares rose 2 percent to $11.00 before the bell on Friday.

  • Reuters – Blackrock Owns 5% of Societe Generale

    U.S. asset manager BlackRock has a stake of just over 5 percent of French bank Societe Generale, French market regulator AMF said on Friday, Reuters reported. The disclosure was made after BlackRock’s holding – acquired on and off the market – rose above the 5 percent threshold at which such disclosures are mandatory.

    (Reuters) – U.S. asset manager BlackRock has a stake of just over 5 percent of French bank Societe Generale, French market regulator AMF said on Friday.

    The disclosure was made after BlackRock’s holding – acquired on and off the market – rose above the 5 percent threshold at which such disclosures are mandatory.

    On behalf of clients and funds under management, BlackRock now has a 5.002 percent stake in SocGen and 4.48 percent of voting rights in the group, according to the AMF filing.

    A BlackRock spokesman in London said the asset manager did not comment on individual company holdings.