Author: Reuters News

  • Reuters – Goldman Sachs Sets Up Fund for Risky Credit Products

    Goldman Sachs Group Inc. has registered a fund that invests in risky credit products as a publicly traded business development company, a way for the bank to avoid some regulations that would otherwise limit its activity. Goldman’s Liberty Harbor Capital LLC unit will invest in middle-market companies that have weak credit ratings and are underserved by banks, according to a registration filing on Friday with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Liberty Harbor typically invests in bonds and loans that are not rated by credit ratings agencies, but would be considered less than investment-grade.

    (Reuters) – Goldman Sachs Group Inc (GS.N) has registered a fund that invests in risky credit products as a publicly traded business development company, a way for the bank to avoid some regulations that would otherwise limit its activity.

    Goldman’s Liberty Harbor Capital LLC unit will invest in middle-market companies that have weak credit ratings and are underserved by banks, according to a registration filing on Friday with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

    Liberty Harbor typically invests in bonds and loans that are not rated by credit ratings agencies, but would be considered less than investment-grade.

    Reuters first reported on Goldman’s plans for the Liberty Harbor business in January.

    Goldman does not expect Liberty Harbor to be subject to the Volcker rule, which would restrict its ability to sponsor or invest in such funds, the bank said in the filing.

    Business development companies are specifically exempt from the Volcker rule.

    Liberty Harbor also qualifies as an “emerging growth company” under the JOBS Act, which will allow it to “take advantage of…reduced reporting and other burdens” that would otherwise be applicable to a publicly traded firm.

    Liberty Harbor will mainly invest in companies with adjusted earnings of $5 million to $75 million a year, across a variety of sectors. Its investments will range in size between $5 million and $50 million, and last from three to 10 years.

    Goldman provided seed funding to the business on November 15, and since then Liberty Harbor has invested about $73 million in eight companies.

    (Reporting By Lauren Tara LaCapra; Editing by Leslie Adler)

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  • Reuters – Lear Settles With Activist Investors

    Auto parts maker Lear Corp. avoided a proxy battle with investors Marcato Capital Management LLC and Oskie Capital Management LLC by agreeing to increase and quicken the pace of its share buyback program and add a board member, Reuters reported. Marcato – a $1.4 billion hedge fund run by Mick McGuire, one of activist investor William Ackman’s former partners – put pressure on Lear in February, saying it planned to nominate candidates to the company’s board.

    (Reuters) – Auto parts maker Lear Corp (LEA.N) avoided a proxy battle with investors Marcato Capital Management LLC and Oskie Capital Management LLC by agreeing to increase and quicken the pace of its share buyback program and add a board member.

    Marcato – a $1.4 billion hedge fund run by Mick McGuire, one of activist investor William Ackman’s former partners – put pressure on Lear in February, saying it planned to nominate candidates to the company’s board.

    Marcato and Oskie have withdrawn their slate and will support the company’s nominees, Lear said on Monday, after it agreed to expand the size of its board to nine from eight.

    Marcato reported a 5.2 percent stake in Lear in February, but said in March it had raised its holding to 5.9 percent.

    Activist investing has become increasingly popular in the last few months with more money being allocated to the strategy as some players, including Marcato, boast some of the strongest returns in the $2.6 trillion hedge fund industry.

    McGuire’s fund, whose other key holdings include Corrections Corp of America (CXW.N), Cincinnati Bell Inc (CBB.N), NCR Corp (NCR.N) and Ryman Hospitality Properties Inc (RHP.N), ranked among last year’s top performers with a roughly 29 percent gain.

    His low-key approach with Lear likely saved both Lear and Marcato millions of dollars by avoiding a full proxy fight – often costly and disruptive.

    BUMP IN SHARE BUYBACKS

    Lear, which repurchased $200 million of its shares in the first three months of 2013, said it would buy back the remaining $800 million in its program in the next 12 months. Lear had earlier said it would complete the program by the end of 2014.

    Lear also said it would start on a new $750 million buyback program soon after the current plan ended.

    “Over the past two years, Lear has returned more cash to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases as a percentage of our market capitalization than any of our automotive supplier peers,” Chairman Henry Wallace said in a statement.

    The company, which has a market value of more than $5 billion, had cash and equivalents of $1.40 billion as of December 31 and no short-term debt balances outstanding. It had long-term liabilities of $1.37 billion.

    “When you look at the financial impact of doing the repurchases, it will not put Lear at a compromised position,” Guggenheim Securities LLC analyst Matthew Stover said.

    Lear has the flexibility to invest in its own business as well as to pursue acquisitions, Stover said.

    Southfield, Michigan-based Lear reported a fourth-quarter profit in February that beat analysts’ expectations.

    In 2007, Lear rejected a $3 billion buyout attempt by an affiliate of billionaire investor Carl Icahn.

    Lear’s shares were up 1.1 percent at $55.48 in afternoon trading Monday on the New York Stock Exchange. They have gained 8 percent since February 8, when Marcato said it would nominate candidates to the board.

    (Additional reporting by A. Ananthalakshmi in Bangalore; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila and Saumyadeb Chakrabarty)

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  • Reuters – Billabong Says Its Still in Talks Over Buyout

    Troubled Australian surfwear firm Billabong International Ltd said on Tuesday it is still in talks with two takeover suitors and requested a trading halt in its shares ahead of a possible announcement this week. Billabong has received offers from a consortium comprised of private equity firm Altamont Capital Partners and U.S. clothing group VF Corp and another group led by Billabong’s former U.S. boss Paul Naude and private equity firm Sycamore Partners. The two competing groups had made indicative matching offers of A$1.10 a share, valuing the company at A$527 million ($549 million), but analysts expect the final bids — which were due in last week — to be around A$0.80-90. That would be slightly above Billabong’s close on Thursday of A$0.73.

    (Reuters) – Troubled Australian surfwear firm Billabong International Ltd said on Tuesday it is still in talks with two takeover suitors and requested a trading halt in its shares ahead of a possible announcement this week.

    Billabong has received offers from a consortium comprised of private equity firm Altamont Capital Partners and U.S. clothing group VF Corp and another group led by Billabong’s former U.S. boss Paul Naude and private equity firm Sycamore Partners.

    The two competing groups had made indicative matching offers of A$1.10 a share, valuing the company at A$527 million ($549 million), but analysts expect the final bids — which were due in last week — to be around A$0.80-90. That would be slightly above Billabong’s close on Thursday of A$0.73.

    The stock, which has lost around two-thirds of its value in the past year, sank to an all-time low of A$0.63 last month.

    VF Corp, which owns brands including The North Face and Vans, only wants the Billabong namesake brand and plans to give Altamont the rest of the portfolio, which includes Von Zipper and Element.

    Billabong said on Tuesday that “discussions in relation to these proposals remain incomplete.” It requested a trading halt until Thursday, or until it is ready to make an announcement if earlier.

    Since the two groups made their initial offers, Billabong has posted a first-half net loss of A$536.6 million and lowered its full-year guidance, citing difficult trading conditions in Europe and a disappointing performance from its Nixon watch brand.

    The VF Corp and Naude offers are the fourth and fifth takeover approaches for the Australian company since February 2012.

    Billabong had a tumultuous 2012, alienating investors after rejecting a A$3.30 per share bid by TPG Capital that February as too low. Subsequent offers of A$1.45 from TPG and Bain Capital were withdrawn after due diligence.

    Billabong, which sponsors current world surfing champion Joel Parkinson, has sold off key assets and replaced its chief executive in the past year as a result of profit downgrades. It raised A$225 million in a deeply discounted rights issue to cut its debt, which currently totals about A$286 million.

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  • Reuters – Nasdaq Buys eSpeed for $750M

    Nasdaq OMX Group Inc. agreed to buy electronic Treasuries-trading platform eSpeed from BGC Partners Inc. for $750 million in cash, providing the exchange operator an entry into one of the world’s largest and most liquid cash markets, Reuters reported. The deal gives Nasdaq more exposure to fixed income markets, fitting into the company’s strategy of expanding in asset classes beyond stock trading, where volumes have been depressed for years.

    (Reuters) – Nasdaq OMX Group Inc agreed to buy electronic Treasuries-trading platform eSpeed from BGC Partners Inc for $750 million in cash, providing the exchange operator an entry into one of the world’s largest and most liquid cash markets.

    The deal gives Nasdaq more exposure to fixed income markets, fitting into the company’s strategy of expanding in asset classes beyond stock trading, where volumes have been depressed for years.

    More than $500 billion in U.S. Treasuries change hands daily.

    The acquisition helps to diversify Nasdaq’s U.S. offerings, said Christopher Allen, an analyst at Evercore Partners.

    “You always want some asset class diversification which Nasdaq really doesn’t have in the U.S., where they just have cash, equity and equity options,” he said.

    Nasdaq plans to offer customers increased access to fixed income products and a greater variety of trading instruments as a result of the acquisition, Chief Executive Robert Greifeld said on a call with analysts.

    The total consideration for the deal is up to $1.23 billion, including an earnout provision that could pay out up to $484 million in Nasdaq OMX common stock over 15 years, BGC said.

    Greifeld and Howard W. Lutnick, chairman and CEO of BGC Partners, have been in informal talks about a possible deal for the past few years, according to two sources familiar with the situation, who declined to be identified because they are not allowed to speak to the media.

    But these people said the conversations heated up late last year after IntercontinentalExchange Inc announced it was buying Nasdaq rival NYSE Euronext for $8.2 billion.

    Two spokeswomen for BGC were not immediately available to comment. Nasdaq had no comment.

    BGC was spun off from Cantor Fitzgerald in 2004.

    Nasdaq said last month it planned to create a market for trading shares of unlisted companies in a joint venture with trading platform SharesPost Inc. And it announced in December it was buying Thomson Reuters Corp’s investor relations, public relations and multimedia services units for $390 million.

    PUSHING THE ENVELOPE

    The eSpeed deal is expected to add to Nasdaq’s earnings within the first twelve months after closing – expected by mid-2013 – the exchange operator said.

    The risk for Nasdaq, however, is that it is buying eSpeed at a time when trading Treasuries might be at a cyclical low, Evercore’s Allen said.

    The U.S. Federal Reserve has been buying large amounts of Treasuries through its quantitative easing program. The result is that rates have stayed low and volatility and trading volume have been capped.

    Greifeld, however, said government intervention would eventually cease, leading to a positive impact on volume. The United States is also issuing more debt, boosting the market for Treasuries, he said.

    Most Wall Street economists do not expect the Fed to begin curtailing its asset purchases for another year. Short-term interest rates, which have been stuck near zero since December 2008, are not forecast to rise until 2015, the Fed’s latest projections show.

    Nasdaq currently offers Treasury options trading in the United States and is close to launching NLX, a Europe-based fixed-income futures trading platform to compete with Deutsche Boerse AG-owned Eurex and NYSE’s London-based Liffe.

    The deal differentiates Nasdaq in fixed income from other exchange operators, which have mainly been focused on interest rate swap clearing and swaps-like futures trading, said Will Rhode, a fixed income analyst at Tabb Group. “We really see Nasdaq pushing the envelope on different approaches to the fixed income markets,” Rhode said.

    Nasdaq plans to spend the next several weeks talking to customers and learning about what other products they want to access on an electronic trading platform, Greifeld said. “The easiest low hanging fruit is in the U.S. Treasury marketplace,” he said.

    Nasdaq expects to fund the purchase with cash on hand and long-term debt.

    Following the deal, Moody’s Investors Service said it was reviewing Nasdaq’s Baa3 bond rating for a possible downgrade.

    Deutsche Bank was Nasdaq’s financial adviser on the deal.

    Shares of Nasdaq closed down 0.9 percent at $32.01 on Monday. The deal was announced after the market closed.

    Shares of BGC were up 92 percent in after-hours trading following the deal’s announcement.

    (Reporting by Ashutosh Pandey in Bangalore, John McCrank and Jessica Toonkel in New York, and Ann Saphir in San Francisco; Editing by Sreejiraj Eluvangal and Edmund Klamann)

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  • Reuters – Taylor Morrison Home Prices IPO

    Homebuilder Taylor Morrison Home Corp. priced its initial public offering of 23.8 million Class A shares between $20-$22 per share as it looks to cash in on investor interest in the recovering U.S. housing market. At the mid-point of the expected range, the company is looking to raise about $500 million. Scottsdale, Arizona-based Taylor Morrison is backed by Oaktree Capital Management, TPG Global and JH Investments Inc. Credit Suisse and Citigroup are lead underwriters to the offering.

    (Reuters) – Homebuilder Taylor Morrison Home Corp priced its initial public offering of 23.8 million Class A shares between $20-$22 per share as it looks to cash in on investor interest in the recovering U.S. housing market.

    At the mid-point of the expected range, the company is looking to raise about $500 million.

    Record-low mortgage rates and rising selling prices have driven up demand to levels that large U.S. builders are struggling to meet, creating room for smaller companies.

    Shares of Tri Pointe Homes LLC, which in January became the first U.S. homebuilder to go public in over a decade, and those of plywood and lumber maker Boise Cascade Co surged in their market debut.

    Scottsdale, Arizona-based Taylor Morrison is backed by Oaktree Capital Management, TPG Global and JH Investments Inc. Credit Suisse and Citigroup are lead underwriters to the offering.

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  • Reuters – Toys R Us Withdraws IPO

    Toys R Us Inc. withdrew its proposed initial public offering on Friday, ending months of uncertainty as the world’s largest dedicated toy retailer also issued a quarterly report card showing disappointing results for the crucial holiday season. Toys R Us determined not to pursue the IPO due to unfavorable market conditions and executive leadership transition, Toys R Us spokeswoman Kathleen Waugh told Reuters. KKR & Co LP, Bain Capital and Vornado Realty Trust took Toys R Us private in 2005, in a $6.6 billion deal.

    (Reuters) – Toys R Us Inc TOY.UL withdrew its proposed initial public offering on Friday, ending months of uncertainty as the world’s largest dedicated toy retailer also issued a quarterly report card showing disappointing results for the crucial holiday season.

    Toys R Us determined not to pursue the IPO due to unfavorable market conditions and executive leadership transition, Toys R Us spokeswoman Kathleen Waugh told Reuters.

    Waugh did not give an update on the company’s search for a new CEO. In February, Gerald Storch decided to step down as Toys R Us chief executive, but he remains chairman of the board.

    The withdrawal of the IPO would not affect the toy retailer’s day-to-day operations, Waugh said, but declined any further comment.

    The resignation of Storch, 56, added to doubts about the retailer’s chances to return to being a public company this year, after filing for an initial public offering in May 2010.

    KKR & Co LP (KKR.N), Bain Capital and Vornado Realty Trust took Toys R Us private in 2005, in a $6.6 billion deal.

    While the company’s results were far better when it was originally considering the IPO, some owners thought they would be able to raise more if they waited, a source had told Reuters. But the results have lagged expectations since then.

    The company had postponed its IPO in 2011 due to weak market conditions and has since struggled with mounting interest expenses and weak sales. Sources had told Reuters in February that chances of this IPO happening were low.

    Toys R Us, which operates stores under its namesake brand and the Babies R Us and FAO Schwarz names, said total sales fell 3 percent in the fourth quarter to $5.77 billion while interest expense jumped 35 percent in the 14 weeks ended February 2. Net profit fell 30 percent to $240 million.

    The company’s performance in 2012 was hurt by a weak global economic environment, particularly in Europe and Japan, Storch said in a statement.

    Toys R Us first went public in April 1978 and operated as a public company until July 2005, when it was taken private.

    (Additional reporting by Himank Sharma in Bangalore; Editing by David Gregorio)

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  • Reuters – Nordic Capital Sells Permobil to Investor AB

    Nordic Capital has sold Permobil to Investor AB. The transaction values the company at SEK5,500 million ($842 million).

    Reuters – Nordic capital divests global market leader permobil to investor * Nordic capital- transaction values the company at an enterprise value of SEK5,500 million (EUR 655 million).

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  • Reuters – Petrobras Auctioning Off Nigerian Oil Assets

    Brazilian oil company Petrobras is to auction off its stakes in Nigerian oil fields to raise cash for domestic projects, a deal that may fetch up to $5 billion, Reuters reported. The state-controlled company, formally known as Petroleo Brasileiro SA, has hired Standard Chartered to run the process, which will kick off in the next two months, banking and oil industry sources said.

    (Reuters) – Brazilian oil company Petrobras (PETR4.SA) is to auction off its stakes in Nigerian oil fields to raise cash for domestic projects, a deal that may fetch up to $5 billion, sources close to the deal said.

    The state-controlled company, formally known as Petroleo Brasileiro SA, has hired Standard Chartered (STAN.L) to run the process, which will kick off in the next two months, banking and oil industry sources said.

    Asian state oil companies are expected to bid in the hopes of adding more production assets to their portfolios. Private equity funds are also interested, banking sources said.

    Standard Chartered and Petrobras declined comment.

    The decision to sell the Nigeria assets marks a retreat away from foreign markets once considered strategic in favor of realizing the government’s goal for Brazil to become self-sufficient in energy.

    Petrobras will sell its 8 percent stake in the Nigerian offshore Agbami blocks, which are operated by U.S. energy major Chevron (CVX.N) and its 20 percent share of the offshore Akpo project, operated by France’s Total (TOTF.PA).

    Crude oil production from the Agbami field fields began in 2008. Output from the project can reach 250,000 barrels per day (bpd), and it holds estimated reserves of 900 million barrels.

    Akpo began production in 2009 and has plateau output of 175,000 bpd of light condensate oil and 9 million cubic meters of gas. It has proved and probable reserves of 620 million barrels of condensate and more than 28 billion cubic meters of gas, according to Total.

    Petrobras began operations in Nigeria in 1998 in the deep waters off the coast of the Niger Delta.

    ASSET SALES

    Petrobras is divesting assets and redirecting investment towards higher-return activities such as exploration and production to finance a five-year, $237 billion capital spending plan, the world’s largest corporate investment program.

    Petrobras hopes to more than double current oil and gas production by the start of the next decade to about 5.2 million barrels of oil equivalent a day and also help Brazil become self-sufficient in refined products as well.

    By divesting assets such as the Nigerian blocks, Petrobras can focus more on exploring for oil in a vast deep sea region off the coast of Brazil known as the subsalt, thought to contain dozens of billions of barrels of high-quality oil.

    Cash flow has been crimped by falling output and the government’s refusal, on anti-inflation grounds, to let Brazilian gasoline and diesel prices rise in line with world prices. This has forced Petrobras to subsidize consumers even as its debt rises above its internal limits.

    Selling assets has not been easy, however, as potential buyers have sensed its need for cash and made low bids.

    The company recently cut its asset sale goal to $9.9 billion from nearly $15 billion after it failed to get attractive offers for energy assets in the Gulf of Mexico.

    ConocoPhillips (COP.N), meanwhile, is selling its Nigerian businesses to Oando Energy (OER.TO) for around $1.79 billion so it can focus on increasing its lower-cost U.S. shale oil and natural gas projects.

    (Additional reporting by Jeb Blount in Rio de Janeiro and Guillermo Parra-Bernal; Editing by Tim Cocks and Jane Baird)

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  • Reuters – Husqvarna Appoints Kai Warn as New CEO

    Kai Warn has been appointed new president and CEO of Husqvarna Group. Hans Linnarson, who was appointed president and CEO in 2011, will continue to work for the group until he retires early 2014. Warn was prevously operations partner at private equity firm IK Investment Partners.

    Reuters – Husqvarna : * Kai Warn appointed new president and CEO of Husqvarna Group * Hans Linnarson, who was appointed President and CEO in 2011, will continue to work for the Group until he retires early 2014 * Warn was operations partner at private equity firm IK Investment Partners (Reporting by Stockholm newsroom, +4687001014)

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  • Reuters – CBS Takes 50% Stake in TV Guide

    CBS is now the proud owner of iconic cable channel and TV program recommendation service TV Guide, writes Reuters. The media company acquired a 50 percent stake in TV Guide, which includes both the cable channel of the same name as well as TVguide.com.

    Reuters – CBS is now the proud owner of iconic cable channel and TV program recommendation service TV Guide.

    The media company announced today that it acquired a 50 percent stake in TV Guide, which includes both the cable channel of the same name as well as TVguide.com. The cable channel is available in over 80 million homes and plays entertainment news alongside a programming grid. But TV Guide’s website stretches far beyond just a simple programming grid, offering content recommendations via mobile apps and entertainment news coverage.

    CBS purchased the stake from One Equity Partners, JPMorgan Chase’s private equity firm that initially purchased 49 percent of TV Guide for $122 million back in 2009. However, CBS paid just $100 million in the deal, according to Deadline. The announcement ends speculation that Yahoo would pick up the property as part of its bid to return to its web service roots while helping to push its own media properties.

    Under terms of the deal, TV Guide will undergo a rebranding effort and be paired with some of the entertainment news programs owned by CBS Entertainment Tonight, OMG! Insider, etc.).

    Filed under: Business, Deals, Media

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  • Reuters – Dell’s Former Lieutenant Leads Coup Attempt

    Dave Johnson finds himself once again pitted against a former employer, writes Reuters. In leading Blackstone Group‘s 11th-hour bid for Dell Inc, the acquisitions expert has seated himself across the table from ex-boss and company founder Michael Dell. Their relationship has now become a crucial element in the battle over the largest private equity-led buyout since the financial crisis, writes Reuters.

    Reuters – Dave Johnson finds himself once again pitted against a former employer.

    In leading Blackstone Group’s 11th-hour bid for Dell Inc, the acquisitions expert and famously tough negotiator has seated himself across the table from ex-boss and company founder Michael Dell. Their relationship has now become a crucial element in the battle over the largest private equity-led buyout since the financial crisis.

    There may even be echoes of the way Nabisco Brands President John Greeniaus ended up switching sides from RJR Nabisco’s CEO Ross Johnson in the struggle for control of the food and tobacco conglomerate in the leveraged buyout boom of the late 1980s.

    Blackstone’s Johnson, a former IBM executive with a reputation for working through the night rather than early in the day, may be joining the party late. But he could still up-end Michael Dell’s original proposal to take the company private for $24.4 billion.

    Whether the two former confidants can work together may decide the fate of the world’s No. 3 PC maker.

    The soft-spoken Red Sox and New England Patriots fan is described by people who have known him for a long time as likeable, smart and loyal. But that loyalty has been questioned twice as he has headed for the exits under controversial circumstances – once after more than 27 years at IBM, and then when he left Dell.

    IBM unsuccessfully sued Johnson when he departed in 2009, alleging he violated a non-compete agreement.

    Now Michael Dell – who told his executive team that Johnson would remain a close and personal adviser when he left to join Blackstone in January – is fighting to hold onto his company against a bid mounted by Blackstone less than three months later. Blackstone has not mentioned a role for his former boss.

    “For all the good he does in an organization, the exit always seems to burn him,” said a person close to Johnson.

    “There was a lot of goodwill (at IBM) but in the last two minutes, he completely erases 25 years of history. Same thing at Dell.”

    The stakes are high for both men. Michael Dell could lose control of a company he nursed from a dorm-room operation into a global personal computer maker. He doesn’t only have Blackstone breathing down his neck but has to also contend with a competing offer from billionaire investor Carl Icahn. Meanwhile, Johnson’s first deal could be one of the most ambitious in technology for Blackstone in years.

    Among people who know Michael Dell and Johnson, there is little agreement about how well the two men get along now.

    The relationship was still close when Johnson, who led some $10 billion worth of deals during his time at Dell, worked to bolster the company’s non-PC-making businesses in areas such as software and enterprise services.

    Johnson was said to have weighed the offer from Blackstone for a while before taking the plunge, one of the people said.

    Three others said Johnson left Dell alienated, and that some members of top management were unhappy with his track record and had few qualms about letting him leave for the world’s largest private equity firm.

    “Dave came into Dell as a change agent. Change agents have a tough job, and their job is to break glass,” one of these people said. “And sometimes where you are breaking glass, people don’t like what you are doing.”

    A spokesman for Michael Dell declined to comment, while a Blackstone spokesman declined to comment on behalf of Johnson. A Dell Inc spokesman also declined to comment.

    WHEELING AND DEALING

    During more than three years at the Texas-based computer maker, Johnson oversaw 18 to 20 acquisitions, according to a Dell spokesman. He reported directly to Michael Dell.

    People who know him say Johnson is more comfortable wheeling and dealing in smaller settings, less at ease in the spotlight of major presentations such as Dell’s analysts’ day.

    He was also known for keeping late hours.

    “You can ask anyone at IBM,” one of the people said. If Johnson’s assistant scheduled a meeting early in the morning it probably “wasn’t going to happen,” this person said.

    Johnson oversaw the 2009 purchase of Perot Systems Corp, which catapulted Dell into the technology services market alongside IBM and HP. Other deals during his tenure included Quest Software, SecureWorks, SonicWall Inc and Wyse Technology.

    At Dell, Johnson was brought in to help beef up the company’s enterprise-related portfolio and diversify away from its reliance on PCs. To that end, Johnson went on an acquisition spree for small to mid-size companies. A big believer in the proper integration of acquired companies, Johnson often told team members that “the real success of a transaction is in the integration.”

    The 61-year old brought discipline and rigor to Dell’s M&A machine, instituting a playbook that aimed to standardize the M&A and integration process, one of the people said.

    That playbook, for example, had templates for documents and contained a list of internal subject-matter experts.

    While Johnson’s strategy helped Dell expand its portfolio and reduce its reliance on PCs, the strategy was also criticized for being slow to offset a decline in PC sales and for failing to integrate the acquired companies fully with Dell to take advantage of scale.

    But Carr Lanphier, analyst with Morningstar, said it is too early to tell whether Johnson’s term at Dell was a success as his effort at diversification is not complete.

    When Johnson joined Blackstone, the private equity giant had been looking for ways to bolster its technology team after having suffered a couple of dealmaker losses. These included Chip Schorr, who left Blackstone in 2010 after serving as its global head of technology investing.

    Johnson is working on Dell with Chinh Chu, one of Blackstone’s most experienced partners, who has been carrying out transactions for the firm since 1990.

    Blackstone has reached out to a number of candidates who could run Dell should its bid succeed, replacing Michael Dell.

    Sources involved in the fast-evolving discussions said Michael Dell and Johnson have competing visions for the company.

    Two people close to Michael Dell have said he was concerned that Blackstone’s buyout offer would dismantle the PC maker. Other people familiar with the situation have said Blackstone has considered a potential sale of Dell’s financial services business as part of a strategy to turn things around.

    Divestitures are not part of the plans by Michael Dell and his buyout partner, the private equity firm Silver Lake, two of the sources said.

    (Editing by Edwin Chan, Tim Dobbyn and Martin Howell)

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  • Reuters – Shire To Buy SARcode Bioscience For $160M Plus Milestone Payouts

    Shire is to buy privately owned U.S. biotech firm SARcode Bioscience, paying $160 million upfront to win rights to a new drug in late-stage development for dry eye diseases.

    The move is Shire’s second acquisition this month of a small company in the ophthalmology space – a hot area for pharmaceutical research – following the purchase of Sweden’s Premacure two weeks ago.

    Britain’s third biggest drugmaker has a long history of snapping up smaller biotech companies to build its specialty drugs business and its new CEO said the latest deals showed that the strategy was set to continue. Flemming Ornskov will take over from Angus Russell as chief executive on April 30.

    Ornskov said ophthalmology was an area he knew well from his previous roles at Bausch and Lomb, Novartis, where he licensed eye drug Lucentis, and Bayer, where the ophthalmic unit reported to him. He said Shire could do further deals in ophthalmology, both in back-of-the-eye and front-of-the-eye diseases.

    “With us having now made two acquisitions, I think we are sending a strong signal both to the external world and to the internal world that we certainly will be looking at further opportunities in ophthalmology, if it is in areas of ophthalmology that we perceive to have high growth opportunities, significant unmet need and where innovation is the key driver for differentiation,” he said.

    Shire said on Monday it aimed to launch SARcode’s new eye drug Lifitegrast in the United States as early as 2016, if Phase III clinical studies pan out as hoped. It is also evaluating regulatory filing strategies in other markets.

    In addition to the upfront payment of $160 million, shareholders in California-based SARcode will be eligible for additional undisclosed payments upon achievement of certain drug development and commercial milestones.

    With the global ophthalmic pharmaceutical market valued at approximately $13 billion in 2012 and growing by 4.5 percent a year, Shire said the therapeutic area was a good fit within its portfolio of specialty medicines.

    Because buying SARcode will add a new Phase III program, the drugmaker said it was conducting a prioritization review of its portfolio to accommodate this new expenditure in 2013.

    “I don’t anticipate that this will increase our overall R&D expenditure this year, but I think we will have to make some re-prioritizations,” Ornskov said.

    He said the two deals in ophthalmology demonstrated that he would not change Shire’s acquisition strategy.

    “I want to continue to send the signal to any company, particularly smaller companies, that if you are in specialty medicine, if you have a lot of innovation and if you are in an area of interest to Shire, you should look at Shire as a potential future partner,” he said.

    Barclays acted as financial advisor to Shire, while J.P. Morgan advised SARcode.

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  • Reuters – HellermannTyton Narrows Range for Listing

    Cabling equipment maker HellermannTyton has narrowed the price range for its London listing to between 195 pence and 205 pence per share, Reuters reported Monday. The company, owned by private equity firm Doughty Hanson, had originally set a price range of 190 pence to 235 pence per share for the sale of at least a 50 percent stake. HellermannTyton has received enough orders for the shares on offer within the revised range.

    (Reuters) – Cabling equipment maker HellermannTyton has narrowed the price range for its London listing to between 195 pence and 205 pence per share, two sources close to the deal said on Monday.

    The company, owned by private equity firm Doughty Hanson, had originally set a price range of 190 pence to 235 pence per share for the sale of at least a 50 percent stake.

    HellermannTyton has received enough orders for the shares on offer within the revised range, the sources said.

    Order books on the initial public offering (IPO), which is expected to raise as much as 250 million pounds ($381 million), are due to close later on Monday and the company will make its market debut on Tuesday.

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  • Reuters – Rhone Capital Buys Bakery Supplies Biz from CSM

    Dutch food ingredients group CSM said on Monday it had agreed to sell its bakery supplies business for 850 million euros ($1.1 billion) to private equity firm Rhone Capital, Reuters reported. CSM put its main bakery supplies business, which makes muffins and pastries mainly for European and U.S. retailers, up for sale in May 2012, blaming weak consumer spending and high raw material prices, in order to focus on more profitable food ingredients.

    (Reuters) – Dutch food ingredients group CSM said on Monday it had agreed to sell its bakery supplies business for 850 million euros ($1.1 billion) to private equity firm Rhone Capital.

    CSM put its main bakery supplies business, which makes muffins and pastries mainly for European and U.S. retailers, up for sale in May 2012, blaming weak consumer spending and high raw material prices, in order to focus on more profitable food ingredients.

    ($1 = 0.7694 euros) (Reporting by Gilbert Kreijger)

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  • Reuters – CDW Files for $500M IPO

    Technology products retailer CDW Corp. filed with U.S. regulators to raise $500 million in an initial public offering, making it the latest private equity-backed company to file to go public this year. CDW was taken private in 2007 for $7.3 billion by Madison Dearborn Partners LLC and Providence Equity Partners. The proposed IPO could raise about $750 million, Reuters reported earlier this month.

    (Reuters) – Technology products retailer CDW Corp filed with U.S. regulators to raise $500 million in an initial public offering, making it the latest private equity-backed company to file to go public this year.

    Large companies that were taken over by private equity firms during the 2005-2007 buyout heyday are starting to tap the public markets as U.S. stock markets rally to record highs.

    Warburg Pincus-backed eye care company Bausch & Lomb also filed for an IPO on Friday. That deal could raise as much as $1.5 billion, Reuters had reported.

    Other private equity-backed companies like drugmaker testing services provider Quintiles Transnational Corp and industrial distribution company HD Supply are also gearing up for IPOs this year.

    CDW was taken private in 2007 for $7.3 billion by Madison Dearborn Partners LLC and Providence Equity Partners. The proposed IPO could raise about $750 million, Reuters reported earlier this month.

    J.P. Morgan, Barclays and Goldman Sachs & Co would lead the offering, CDW said in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. ()

    Founded in 1984, CDW is one of the largest computer resellers in the United States, selling products such as notebooks, tablets and printers to businesses and government organizations.

    CDW, which sells products from companies including Apple Inc , Hewlett-Packard Co and International Business Machines Corp, online and through its catalog, said it intends to list its common stock under the symbol ‘CDW’.

    The company did not disclose the number of shares it intended to sell or the exchange on which they would trade.

    The amount of money a company says it plans to raise in its first IPO filings is used to calculate registration fees. The final size of the IPO could be different.

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  • Reuters – Big Tech Tests the Waters of the Music Stream

    Technology giants Apple, Google and Amazon are furiously maneuvering for position in the online music business and looking at ways to make streaming profitable, despite the fact that pioneer Pandora has never made a profit, Reuters wrote Friday. It has been more than a decade since the iPod heralded the revival of Apple and presaged the smartphone revolution. Streaming service Pandora is spending freely and racking up losses to expand globally. Even social media stalwarts Facebook and Twitter are jumping on the bandwagon.

    (Reuters) – Technology giants Apple, Google and Amazon are furiously maneuvering for position in the online music business and looking at ways to make streaming profitable, despite the fact that pioneer Pandora has never made a profit.

    It has been more than a decade since the iPod heralded the revival of Apple and presaged the smartphone revolution, even as music-sharing site Napster was showing the disruptive power of the Internet in the music business.

    Now Google, Amazon.com Inc and Apple are among the Silicon Valley powerhouses sounding out top recording industry executives, according to sources with knowledge of talks and media reports. Streaming service Pandora is spending freely and racking up losses to expand globally. Even social media stalwarts Facebook and Twitter are jumping on the bandwagon.

    All of them see a viable music streaming and subscription service as crucial to growing their presence in an exploding mobile environment. For Google and Apple, it is critical in ensuring users remain loyal to their mobile products.

    Music has been integral to the mobile experience since the early days of iTunes, which upended the old models with its 99-cent per song buying approach. Now, as smartphones and tablets supplant PCs and virtual storage replaces songs on devices, mobile players from handset makers to social networks realize they must stake out a place or risk ceding control of one of the largest components of mobile device usage.

    About 48 percent of smartphone users listen to music on their device, making it the fourth most popular media-related activity after social networking, games and news, according to a ComScore survey of mobile behavior released in February. Users ranked a phone’s music and video capability at 7.4 on a scale of 1 to 10, with 10 being most important purchase consideration factor, according to the study.

    “Music is very strategic for the various electronic devices Samsung manufactures,” said Daren Tsui, CEO and co-founder of streaming music service mSpot, which Samsung bought last year to create the Music Hub service now available on Galaxy smartphones in the United States and Europe.

    “By owning it, we can absolutely customize the music experience and leverage the fact that it’s not just a service but there’s also a hardware component.”

    In January, Beats Electronics, the startup co-founded by recording supremo Jimmy Iovine and hip-hop performer-producer Dr. Dre, and backed by Universal and Warner Music, announced a new streaming-subscription service dubbed “Daisy” to take on Pandora and Spotify starting this summer.

    Now, industry insiders expect Apple, Google and other technology titans to jump into the fray. Apple is talking with music labels about tacking a subscription service option onto iTunes, sources have said, while Google is said to be planning a YouTube subscription music service, according to media reports.

    “There are some content creators that think they would benefit from a subscription revenue stream in addition to ads, so we’re looking at that,” a YouTube spokesperson said, but declined to comment on any specific negotiations.

    Apple declined to comment.

    Microsoft is already promoting its Xbox Music service. Their entry promises to catalyze an industry shake-up and propel music streaming further into the mainstream.

    “ITunes was great but it needs a step forward,” Iovine, chairman of Universal Music’s Interscope-Geffen-A&M Records, told the AllThingsD conference in February. “There is an ocean of music out there that people want.”

    MOBILE MUSIC LOVERS

    Music streaming, or playing songs over the Internet, has in recent years begun to come into its own as listeners increasingly choose to stream songs from apps like Pandora via their smartphones, rather than buy and store individual tracks.

    The ad-free subscription model, where consumers pay a flat fee for near-unlimited listening time, is relatively new and quickly gaining popularity.

    Pandora, one of the pioneers, is now trying to convert users of its free ad-supported radio service into subscribers. It says mobile users account for more than two thirds of its music, up from just 5 percent of listener-hours three years earlier.

    Subscription services are expected to have crossed the 10 per cent mark as a share of total digital music revenues in 2012 for the first time, according to a recent report from the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, which represents the recording industry worldwide.

    Consumers spent $5.6 billion worldwide for digital music in 2012, an increase of 9 percent, offsetting the decline in CDs and other physical ways to provide music. That gave the industry its best growth since 1998, albeit a miniscule 0.3 percent, according to the IFPI.

    Pure buyers “have to spend hundreds of dollars a month on music, which most people can’t afford to do,” Spotify founder and CEO Daniel Ek told Reuters in an interview last week at South-by-Southwest Interactive. “It’s pretty obvious that the access model or the subscription model is a much better proposition for most people.”

    U.S. consumers will stream an estimated 100 billion tracks this year, says David Bakula, senior vice-president for client development and analytics for Nielsen Entertainment.

    “The big question is who has the business model to make it work,” said Bakula, a former executive at Universal Music, one of the four major music labels. “The first ones in the market may not be the winners.”

    Apple CEO Tim Cook recently met with Iovine and other Beats executives to find out more about that business. It is unclear if Apple will join Beats’ Project Daisy.

    SHOW ME THE MONEY

    Making money off music streaming is difficult. Leading players Pandora and Spotify, despite attracting hundreds of millions of dollars in financing and millions of subscribers, have never reported a cent of profit.

    No less a personage than Steve Jobs himself was a skeptic.

    “Never say never, but customers don’t seem to be interested in it,” the late Apple co-founder and online music visionary told Reuters in a 2007 interview. Apple’s current executives have not publicly stated their views on streaming music.

    Pandora, which went public in 2011, now has 67 million monthly listeners worldwide – a 41 percent jump from a year ago – together listening to more than 13 billion hours of music.

    But its losses more than doubled to $38.1 million in the year to January 31, 2013, hurt by the high cost of standard streaming licenses that typically have a per-track royalty model. This has forced Pandora, which relies mainly on advertising for revenue, to cap free mobile listening at 40 hours per month.

    It and other music services such as Clear Channel Communications’ iHeartRadio are now urging lawmakers in the U.S. Congress to pass the “Internet Radio Fairness Act,” which would set royalty rates for subscription music services using the same standard that has so far been applied to other forms of radio.

    But a group of 125 musicians, including Billy Joel and Rihanna, are speaking up against it, arguing that the bill would cut by 85 percent the amount of money an artist receives when his or her songs are played over the Internet.

    The issue of how recording labels and musicians will be paid is one of the biggest roadblocks to growth. Competition will almost certainly force a shakeout, with winners and losers.

    That could accelerate once major technology companies like Amazon and Google flex their marketing muscles, not to mention Apple with its ability to leverage its enormous base of online music buyers. The California gadget giant is unlikely to cede its lead in selling music without a fight.

    While streaming could undercut sales of music tracks, Apple has always maintained that if there is potential for cannibalization of its products, the gadget maker would rather be in charge than let others in on it.

    Finally, Microsoft has a large audience of Windows and Xbox players to whom it can promote Xbox Music Pass, a $9.99 a month service it launched in October. The software giant has declined to talk about its future plans in this area.

    Bring it on, says Ek from Spotify.

    “It’s rare that gigantic companies figure out a new way to do something peripheral,” Ek said. “I don’t believe the world will only be controlled by a Google or an Apple. It will be companies who are great at games like EA, at films like Netflix, or at music like Spotify.”

    (Additional reporting by Gerry Shih in San Francisco; Editing by Claudia Parsons)

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  • Reuters – Paltz Builds Stake in PepsiCo, Mondelez

    U.S. activist shareholder Nelson Peltz has in recent weeks been building up stakes in PepsiCo Inc. and Oreo maker Mondelez International Inc, Britain’s Daily Telegraph reported on Friday, citing sources familiar with the matter. The newspaper said the exact size of Peltz’s stakes in the two companies were unclear, but cited one source as saying that Peltz had spent at least $2 billion in a concerted buying spree.

    (Reuters) – U.S. activist shareholder Nelson Peltz has in recent weeks been building up stakes in PepsiCo Inc and Oreo maker Mondelez International Inc, Britain’s Daily Telegraph reported on Friday, citing sources familiar with the matter.

    The newspaper said the exact size of Peltz’s stakes in the two companies were unclear, but cited one source as saying that Peltz had spent at least $2 billion in a concerted buying spree.

    According to a Feb. 14 regulatory filing, Peltz’s Trian Fund Management did not hold any stock in either company as of Dec. 31, 2012.

    PepsiCo and Trian Fund Management were not immediately available for comment.

    A spokesman for Mondelez said he was not aware if Peltz had a stake in the company.

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  • CVC Cashes in from $1.3B Offering of Marahari Shares

    CVC Capital Partners and PT Multipolar Tbk raised around $1.3 billion by selling part of their stake in Indonesian retail giant PT Matahari Department Store, Reuters wrote. London-based CVC, which bought a 60 percent stake in Matahari in 2010, is on course to make a return of between seven and eight times its initial investment if it eventually exits its entire stake at the current valuation, according to Reuters calculations. By private equity standards, making two times cash paid is considered a success.

    (Reuters) – CVC Capital Partners and PT Multipolar Tbk raised around $1.3 billion by selling part of their stake in Indonesian retail giant PT Matahari Department Store, sources said, underlining the profit potential for private equity firms in fast-growing Southeast Asian markets.

    London-based CVC, which bought a 60 percent stake in Matahari in 2010, is on course to make a return of between seven and eight times its initial investment if it eventually exits its entire stake at the current valuation, according to Reuters calculations. By private equity standards, making two times cash paid is considered a success.

    The deal is also a timely boost for CVC after it suffered last year Asia’s largest-ever private equity loss of A$1.8 billion ($1.9 billion) on its investment in Australia’s Nine Entertainment.

    “The transaction introduces domestic listings as an additional viable exit route for larger private equity investments in Indonesia, a welcome development for the PE money invested or being lined up to invest in the country,” said Michael Prahl, executive director for INSEAD’s Singapore-based Global Private Equity Initiative.

    “It also shows that large controlling deals can be done in Indonesia, and they can be done outside the commodities space, where most large deals have traditionally taken place,” he said.

    CVC, through one of its subsidiaries, and Multipolar sold 1.167 billion shares in Matahari at 10,850 rupiah each, just above the middle of a marketing range, sources with direct knowledge of the deal told Reuters. That put the total deal at 12.66 trillion rupiah ($1.3 billion), making it the biggest stock sale in Indonesia since 2008.

    The deal values Matahari, Indonesia’s biggest department store operator, at close to $3.3 billion and gives it a price to earnings (P/E) multiple of 27 times for fiscal year 2013, according to separate sources with knowledge of the matter.

    “I think the price is still reasonable given Matahari’s robust growth profile and Indonesia’s consumer potential,” said Jemmy Paul, fund manager at PT Sucorinvest Asset Management.

    “Given its main competitor Ramayana is trading at 22 times PE, then Matahari will trade at a slight premium,” said Paul.

    The offering had initially been marketed in a range of 10,000 to 11,250 rupiah per share, before being narrowed to 10,650 to 10,950 rupiah.

    It was still unclear what percent CVC and Multipolar held in Matahari after the secondary share sale, which was equivalent to a 40 percent stake in the retailer. Prior to the offering, Matahari was owned 71 percent by Asia Color Company, a CVC vehicle in which Singapore’s GIC also has a stake, and 24.9 percent by Multipolar. Their stakes could fall further if an overallotment on the deal is exercised.

    CVC declined comment.

    PROFITS SOAR

    Investors are attracted to Indonesia’s fast-growing economy and expanding middle class, with the country expected to add 90 million people to its consuming class by 2030, according to McKinsey & Co.

    Matahari’s net profit soared 66 percent in 2012 from the previous year to 770.9 billion rupiah, while revenue rose 19.5 percent to 5.62 trillion rupiah over the same period.

    Gross sales at stores opened for at least one calendar year grew 11.1 percent in 2012, 13.6 percent in 2011 and 11.2 percent in 2010, the offering document showed.

    The offering secured about $435 million in cornerstone pledges from a who’s-who of global and regional investors, including BlackRock, Fidelity Investments, Schroders and Goldman Sachs’ GS Investment Strategies.

    The group of 15 investors also includes Government of Singapore Investment Corp and state investor Temasek , and hedge funds Och-Ziff Capital Management Group LLC and Azentus Capital Management Ltd.

    Cornerstone investors in Indonesia are free to sell their shares any time they want, unlike in Hong Kong, where they get guaranteed allocation in exchange for holding the shares for a fixed amount of time, typically three months.

    The sale will also help boost liquidity in the thinly traded stock, with Matahari’s free float rising to about 42 percent after the offering, from less than 2 percent before. If the overallotment is exercised, Matahari’s free float would reach nearly 48 percent, according to the offering document.

    Matahari shares were suspended on Friday at the company’s request to stabilise pricing. The last day the shares changed hands was on March 8, when they closed at 4,200 rupiah.

    CVC acquired a 60 percent stake in Matahari in 2010 through a $790 million buyout, which included around $350 million of leveraged debt. Assuming CVC paid in around $264 million of equity for its stake, the firm is on course to make around seven to eight times that amount if further exits achieve the same valuation, according to Reuters calculations.

    CIMB Bank, Morgan Stanley and UBS were hired as joint global coordinators for the deal. The underwriters stand to earn about $18.2 million, or 1.4 percent of the offering excluding the overallotment option on the sale, according to the offering document. ($1 = 9733.0000 Indonesian rupiahs)($1 = 0.9580 Australian dollars)

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  • Reuters – PE Firms Pouring Money into Walk-In Clinics, Urgent Care

    Walk-in clinics are popping up in shopping malls and main streets across the United States and private equity is helping fund the expansion, Reuters reported Thursday. At least a dozen private equity firms have in the last few years plowed millions of dollars into urgent care clinics, which have become popular with people who do not have regular doctors or who like the convenience of their extended hours of operation. Several private equity executives told Reuters they are eager for more acquisitions in this sector because they expect profits to grow as healthcare reforms boost the number of Americans with health insurance by more than 30 million over the next decade.

    (Reuters) – Walk-in clinics are popping up in shopping malls and main streets across the United States and private equity is helping fund the expansion.

    At least a dozen private equity firms have in the last few years plowed millions of dollars into urgent care clinics, which have become popular with people who do not have regular doctors or who like the convenience of their extended hours of operation.

    Several private equity executives told Reuters they are eager for more acquisitions in this sector because they expect profits to grow as healthcare reforms boost the number of Americans with health insurance by more than 30 million over the next decade.

    “If you think about where healthcare is headed, urgent care is very clearly part of the solution, said Stan Blaylock, a former executive at drug store chain Walgreen Co, who left to invest in and head the urgent care chain Physicians Immediate Care.

    The number of such clinics in the United States climbed almost 20 percent to 9,400 in the last four years, according to the Urgent Care Association of America. Almost 40 percent of clinics surveyed by the trade group expect to expand their facilities or add new clinics this year, up from 18 percent in 2010.

    After poor management caused many walk-in health centers to close in the 1970s and 1980s, today’s clinics are much improved, thanks to investor money and customer demand. They are in more convenient locations, open earlier and close later, and offer online billing. Some also sell snacks and dispense medicine to boost profits.

    “We borrow a lot from the restaurant industry,” said Zach Wooldridge, co-founder of Elm Creek Partners, a Dallas-based equity firm, which in 2011 bought a majority stake in Millennium Healthcare Management, an urgent care chain with clinics in Louisiana and Mississippi. “We have to be good, fast and kind to be successful.

    Wooldridge declined to say how much Elm Creek paid for Millennium Healthcare. The firm – like others – plans to remain invested for several years, before selling the company or taking it public. He expected that his chain and others would generate EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) margins of about 20 percent when fully operational.

    Private equity firms invested $4 billion in 2012 in health and medical services, which include urgent care, up from $3.5 billion in 2011, according to Thomson Reuters data.

    One of the first in the recent wave of investments was in 2010, when venture capital firm Sequoia Capital and private equity firm General Atlantic bought MedExpress, the country’s No. 3 urgent care chain. They did not disclose the size of their investment.

    In the same year, health insurer Humana Inc bought the largest U.S. walk-in chain, Concentra, with 330-clinics, for $805 million. And LLR Partners and health insurer WellPoint Inc invested last summer in 12th ranked Physicians Immediate Care, a chain of 20 urgent care clinics based in Chicago for an undisclosed sum.

    INVESTOR INTEREST

    Most urgent care chains are privately run and investing in them is not risk free. Too many clinics in close proximity can saturate a market, and low insurance reimbursements can cut into the bottom line.

    Consumer advocates also say they worry investors will drive clinics to focus more on profits than on quality of care.

    Private equity firms say they help clinics standardize procedures and consolidate overhead costs like billing. Scott Perricelli of LLR Partners said his firm also spends a lot of time helping clinics look for new branch locations and recruit doctors – two tasks physicians are usually too busy to tackle.

    When Aaron Money, an executive at FFL, a San Francisco-based private equity firm, saw the potential in urgent care, he teamed up with physician Lee Resnick to start WellStreet, a chain of walk-in health clinics in Georgia. FFL owns 70 percent of the business.

    WellStreet’s clientele are mostly privately insured, said Money, who expects business to grow as health reforms under the U.S. Affordable Care Act kick in.

    “We thought it would be mostly people who would otherwise go to the emergency room. But it’s equal parts E.R. and primary care physician-type appointments,” he said.

    Health industry experts say urgent care centers should keep their services simple to maximize profitability. They are better equipped to treat a kid with an ear infection, than a diabetes patient who needs ongoing, complex care, for instance.

    The clinics could lose money if they spend time with patients or take on complicated health problems because insurance companies generally reimburse at a flat rate for each visit, said Franz Ritucci, president of the industry group American Academy of Urgent Care.

    Mike Williams, who heads the Abaris Group, a consulting firm that advises urgent and ambulatory care clinics, said, “It’s not complex, critical-care medicine. It’s a low-tech, high-touch business.”

    (Reporting By Atossa Araxia Abrahamian; Editing by Jilian Mincer, Tiffany Wu and Leslie Gevirtz)

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  • Reuters – Roche, KKR and Hellman & Friedman in Life Tech Auction

    Roche Holding AG and a buyout group comprising KKR & Co LP and Hellman & Friedman LLC have joined the bidding for Life Technologies Corp, a genetic testing company coveted for its advanced diagnostics and steady cash flow, writes Reuters. Roche’s interest in Life Tech, a biomedical laboratory equipment maker with an $11 billion market value, signals the Swiss drugmaker’s continued interest in gene sequencing a year after its $6.8 billion hostile offer for Illumina Inc failed over price.

    Reuters – Roche Holding AG and a buyout group comprising KKR & Co LP and Hellman & Friedman LLC have joined the bidding for Life Technologies Corp, a genetic testing company coveted for its advanced diagnostics and steady cash flow, according to people familiar with the matter.

    Roche’s interest in Life Tech, a biomedical laboratory equipment maker with an $11 billion market value, signals the Swiss drugmaker’s continued interest in gene sequencing a year after its $6.8 billion hostile offer for Illumina Inc failed over price.

    The potential bidders are joining what is turning out to be a competitive auction, as cheap financing and growing confidence in the U.S. economy prompt more companies and private equity firms to contemplate deals costing more than $10 billion.

    Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc, Danaher Corp and a buyout consortium of Blackstone Group LP, Carlyle Group LP, TPG Capital LP and Singapore’s state investor, Temasek Holdings, are among the parties weighing bids, Reuters previously reported.

    Healthcare companies have been attracted to Life Tech by the scale and synergies that a tie-up could bring while private equity firms have found the Carlsbad, California-based company’s reliable cash flow appealing, people familiar with the matter said.

    Bids are due in early April, said the people, who asked not to be named because details of the auction are not public.

    Life Tech shares, which were down 1 percent before the news, ended up 1 percent at $63.58 on Tuesday. They are up more than 30 percent since the start of the year on hopes that the company’s exploration of strategic alternatives will lead to a sale.

    Representatives for KKR, Hellman & Friedman and Life Tech declined to comment. Roche said it does not comment on market speculation.

    Analysts see a good fit between the laboratory equipment and scientific instrument businesses of Thermo Fisher and Life Technologies, with the exception of Life Tech’s genetic sequencing, which Thermo Fisher could choose to divest after a deal.

    Industrial and healthcare conglomerate Danaher, which has a life sciences and diagnostics division, agreed to buy Life Tech’s stake in a mass spectrometry joint venture with MDS Analytical Technologies for $450 million in cash in 2009.

    Private equity firms have tried to compete in the auction by teaming up, a move that helps them reduce the size of their individual equity commitment but does not improve their returns.

    The so-called club deals have become less popular in recent years over concerns about corporate governance in acquired companies and a backlash from some fund investors who see little point in having exposure to a company through more than one buyout fund.

    People close to the Life Tech sale process said buyout firms could struggle to achieve internal rates of return of 15 percent or more on the deal based on the leverage Life Technologies could take on to capture a sufficient portion of the financing market in a transaction.

    (Reporting by Soyoung Kim and Greg Roumeliotis in New York; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick, Matthew Lewis and Steve Orlofsky)

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