Barron's': What's Carl Icahn Buying?

What's Carl Icahn Buying? Forbes discusses how the legendary investor beat the market lately. Another piece profiles four values helped by the recent pullback.

According to Forbes.com, the fund operated by the legendary hedge-fund manager was helped in the second quarter by a large position in Apple (ticker: AAPL ), which scored a market-beating 25% gain in the past six months.

"Icahn increased his already big bet on Apple when its stock weakened to $72 at the end of January, buying $500 million more of Apple's shares," writes Nathan Vardi, a Forbes magazine associate editor who follows the hedge-fund industry. Apple, which currently trades at around $96, is "by far Icahn's largest trading position," Vardi adds.

Vardi writes that Icahn's fund also benefited in the second quarter from its stake in Chesapeake Energy ( CHK ), a natural-gas producer "whose direction has been significantly changed by Icahn, who helped push out its founding CEO Aubrey McClendon." That being said, Chesapeake, after rising nicely for most of the quarter, fell sharply in July. It's now up around 14% over the past six months, roughly double that of the Standard & Poor's 500.

According to Vardi, Icahn finished the first half of 2014 with his investment fund up 10.2%, outpacing the S&P 500, which returned 6.05% over the same time period. It also "crushed the average hedge fund manager," who returned 3.2% this year through June, according to HFR.

I had hoped to be learning from Icahn directly about his latest investing thoughts. That's because Yahoo Finance, in promoting its new contributor network on July 23, promoted Icahn as the leading name in its "truly all-star cast" of investment writers.

It's now been almost three weeks since Yahoo launched the new contributor page and Icahn still hasn't weighed in yet. http://carlicahn.tumblr.com/

To be sure, David Sterman is no Carl Icahn. But Sterman, a veteran financial writer with Street Authority, has nonetheless penned an interesting piece about four "deep-value stocks uncovered" by the recent market pullback.

It's a motley group of stocks, including conglomerate Loews (L); Abengoa Yield ( ABY ), a U.K.-based yield-oriented spinoff of global energy firm Abengoa; Roundy's ( RNDY ), a Wisconsin-based grocery chain; and the closed-end New Germany Fund ( GF ).

Regarding Loews, Sterman writes that "shares currently have a price-to-book value ratio of 0.81, meaning they trade for only 81% of the company's tangible book value.

"To be sure," he adds, "this isn't your typical financial services firm. Loews also owns hotels and has stakes in energy service providers, and it's that last segment that has weighed on results recently. Yet Loews is doing whatever any stock trading below book value should do: buying back shares. The company has already spent more than $300 million on buybacks this year, and it has left the door open to more repurchases as the year progresses."

Sterman writes that Abengoa Yield's dividend yield is marching toward 6% because of the recent price drop.

"It's hard to cite any specific reasons for recent share price weakness (for both the "yieldco" and the parent company), but it may reflect broader skittishness around European stocks. But Abengoa -- and the yield play -- are fairly well insulated from economic risk, thanks to long-term contracts."

I'll close with two less-than-encouraging columns about a slew of newspaper and other print-media assets that have been spun off into separate companies in the past year including Time Inc. ( TIME ) and News Corp ( NWSA ), the corporate parent of Barron's and the Wall Street Journal.

And recently, as New York Times media columnist David Carr puts it, "three of the biggest players in American newspapers -- Gannett, Tribune Co., and E.W. Scripps, companies built on print franchises that expanded into television -- dumped those properties like yesterday's news in a series of spinoffs."

Unfortunately, Carr has little good to say about the future of many of these new pure-play print-media concerns.

"It's a measure of the basic problem that many people haven't cared or noticed as their hometown newspapers have reduced staffing, days of circulation, delivery and coverage," writes Carr. "Will they notice or care when those newspapers go away altogether? I'm not optimistic about that."

Another respected media writer, Michael Wolff, is only a tad more optimistic about the future of print media as a viable business than Carr is.

Writing in USA Today, Wolff writes that "Wall Street clearly doesn't give great value to what we do. Often our own children seem to wonder why we do it. But on the brighter side, the powers that be aren't so much taking our livelihood from us as they are giving it back."

(MergerMarket) Misys on the look-out for new targets

Misys on the look-out for new targets

Misys, a private-equity backed global software provider for banks and financial institutions, could make further acquisitions to support growth, Chief Executive Officer Nadeem Syed said.

UK-based Misys aims to become the leading player in financial lending market, said Syed, adding that the company is particularly interested in retail banking, wholesale banking, capital markets, investment management as well as other lending solutions in financial software. Misys announced on Monday 11 August the acquisition of Custom Credit Systems (CCS), a Texas, US-based provider of commercial loan origination and loan workflow management software, for an undisclosed sum of money.

Potential acquisitions can happen anywhere as Misys is looking for assets all over the world, said Syed.

Misys does not have an allocated war chest for acquisitions as its profitability gives the company ‘a lot of freedom’, Syed said.

Misys’ revenues for the financial year ending on 31 May were USD 946m.

Misys was acquired by Vista Equity Partners for GBP 1.4bn in March 2012. The private equity firm is the key financial adviser for the company, Syed said. Barclays, JPMorgan Cazenove, Moelis & Company and Allen & Overy advised Misys during the sale to Vista.

In February 2014 Misys acquired IND Group, the Hungary-based developer of online and mobile banking applications, for GBP 17m.

Misys will continue growing organically with a focus on support and development, Syed said.

For the past two years the company has been growing aggressively, Syed said, adding that in this period Misys has hired 1,000 new employees.

Misys has 70 offices globally and provides its services to 2,000 customers in 120 countries, Syed said. It may list ‘at some point in the future’, Syed said, adding that currently the company is focused on growth.

>>> French National Assembly member claims that he has been informed by "reliabl

French National Assembly member claims that he has been informed by "reliable medical sources" that several cases of Ebola have been reported in French territory; Health Ministry denies any Ebola cases in France - Assembly member Patrick Balkany said he has asked the Health Ministry for more information on Ebola any potential cases in the country. 

>>> US Close Dow +0,10% S&P +0,28% Nasdaq +0,70%

Closing Market Summary: Small Caps Rally to Start the Week

The major averages began the new week on a modestly higher note. The S&P 500 settled higher by 0.3% with seven sectors registering gains, while the Russell 2000 (+1.0%) and Nasdaq Composite (+0.7%) outperformed. For its part, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (+0.1%) was limited to a slim gain as blue chip listings had a tough time keeping pace.

Equity indices climbed from the opening bell with the early advance supported by upbeat action overseas. Furthermore, a slight improvement on the geopolitical scene was also cited for the improved sentiment. Specifically, a ceasefire was agreed upon in Gaza on Sunday, while pro-Russian separatists in east Ukraine also asked for a pause in fighting.

The crisis in Ukraine was in the headlines during the day as conflicting reports about a potential humanitarian mission swirled about. The early reports suggested Ukraine's government agreed to allow a Red Cross-led operation with participation from Russia, Germany, and the United States, but subsequent headlines indicated Kiev never gave permission for Russian involvement.

Despite the advance, today's session lacked clear sector leadership as the consumer staples sector (+0.8%) ended in the lead, while other countercyclical groups underperformed. Meanwhile on the cyclical side, consumer discretionary (+0.4%) and technology (+0.6%) outperformed, while energy (-0.2%) and financials (+0.2%) lagged throughout the session.

Today's leading sector—consumer staples—drew strength from the shares of Sysco (SYY 37.44, +1.17), which rallied 3.2% in reaction to in-line earnings. Peer Dean Foods (DF 15.20, -0.61) was not as fortunate, falling 3.9% in reaction to a bottom-line miss and cautious guidance for the third quarter. In addition, the company withdrew its full-year guidance due to a volatile dairy commodity environment.

Elsewhere among countercyclical sectors, the utilities space (-0.4%) widened its third-quarter loss to 7.0%, while health care (unch) lagged throughout the session.

The health care sector ended on its session low, while the high-beta biotech group ended a bit below its early high. The iShares Nasdaq Biotechnology ETF (IBB 253.21, +1.72) gained 0.7% after being up 1.3% during the first two hours of action. Despite the afternoon slip, the biotech group still ended ahead of the S&P 500 and contributed to the outperformance of the Nasdaq.

The tech-heavy index also received noteworthy support from its top component—Apple (AAPL 95.99, +1.25)—and chipmakers. Apple added 1.3%, while the PHLX Semiconductor Index rose 1.0% with all but two components posting gains. Micron (MU 30.74, +0.70) led the way, climbing 2.3%.

Treasuries alternated between gains and losses before ending little changed. The benchmark 10-yr yield remained at 2.42%.

Participation was well below average with fewer than 585 million shares changing hands at the NYSE.

Tomorrow, the June Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey will be released at 10:00 ET, while the Treasury Budget for July will cross the wires at 14:00 ET (consensus -$96.00 billion).
  • S&P 500 +4.8% YTD 
  • Nasdaq Composite +5.4% YTD 
  • Dow Jones Industrial Average UNCH YTD 
  • Russell 2000 -1.8% YTD

(BFW) Glaxo May Begin Testing ‘Promising’ Ebola Vaccine in Humans


Glaxo May Begin Testing ‘Promising’ Ebola Vaccine in Humans
2014-08-11 15:16:09.812 GMT


By Oliver Staley
Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) -- GlaxoSmithKline is developing an
Ebola vaccine and is discussing starting phase 1 trials on human
subjects with regulators and the World Health Organization, the
company said in an e-mailed statement.
* Trials may begin this year.
* Animal trial results have been “promising,” according to
GSK statement
NOTE: GSK acquired the vaccine after buying Swiss-based biotech
company Okairos last year NOTE: Spain Imports Ebola Drug to
Treat Priest as Ethicists Weigh Use

For Related News and Information:
First Word scrolling panel: FIRST<GO>
First Word newswire: NH BFW<GO>

To contact the reporter on this story:
Oliver Staley in London at +44-20-3216-4369 or
ostaley@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story:
Phil Serafino at +33-1-5530-6277 or
pserafino@bloomberg.net
Robert Valpuesta, Kristen Hallam

WSJ : Europe's Investment Banking Recovery Isn't Sustainable

Europe's Investment Banking Recovery Isn't Sustainable
European Banks Have Only Stabilized Their Trading Businesses

Don't call it a comeback.

Europe's investment banks turned in a surprisingly good second quarter performance, particularly in the closely watched fixed-income trading arena.

But although they have regained some of the market share they lost to U.S. rivals in recent years, this doesn't yet look a sustainable turnaround.

U.S. banks had set a weak tone. JPMorgan's JPM -0.07% 17% fall in revenues from fixed-income, currencies and commodities trading led an average industry decline of 9% in the second quarter versus the same period last year. This created expectations of lackluster results in Europe.

However, Deutsche Bank DBK.XE -0.31% —the most global of Europe's investment banks—reported flat revenues and others followed with revenue gains. BNP Paribas BNP.FR -0.35% turned in a 22% top-line increase. On average, nine European banks saw fixed income trading revenue grow 2.5%, according to Nomura. Stripping out big declines at Royal Bank of Scotland RBS.LN -1.41% and Barclays, BARC.LN +1.24% which took decisions later than peers to exit big chunks of these markets, Europe posted an average rise of 9%.

The results went against the script of falling volatility, less investor trading and low interest rates suppressing sales and margins. Overall, European banks regained 2 percentage points of global market share in fixed income trading from U.S. banks after three straight years of losses, according to Citigroup. C +0.04% They now have 47% of the global market, excluding Citi's own business.

But behind the positive numbers are a few oddities. First, the second quarter last year was particularly poor for Europeans in general and the French in particular—hence BNP's stellar turn. U.S. fixed-income trading revenues rose 12% on average in the second quarter of 2013, according to Nomura, while European banks' top lines shrunk by an average of 13%.

Second, this year saw a flood of new European bond issues, which helped promote secondary trading as investors rejigged portfolios. Europe had its best ever first half for high-yield deals and its best first half for three years in investment-grade debt, according to Dealogic. In subordinated capital bonds for banks and insurers, Europe did more than one-and-a-half times the volume of the rest of the world.

That is part of a continuing shift in European corporate fundraising, from a heavy reliance on bank balance sheets to more direct capital markets activity. This has, however, been playing out in slow motion since the creation of the euro at the end of the last millennium. A record half doesn't presage a quantum leap forward.

Also those tailwinds have dropped off in the third quarter. Corporate bond issuance was down 14% year-over-year in July, while volatility in currencies and European rates has also been further damped.

For Deutsche Bank, the last European determined to challenge on the global stage, market-share gains this half have put its fixed-income trading business on an equal global leadership footing with JPMorgan, according to Citigroup. But that came with an increase in balance sheet leverage at the German bank, which must reverse.

Elsewhere in Europe, the decent trading results at best suggest that banks who are stripping back to niche strategies—like BNP Paribas, Credit Suisse CSGN.VX -0.33% and UBS UBSN.VX +0.57% —have made viable choices, according to Deutsche Bank's analysts.

European banks have stabilized their trading businesses. But it is too soon to get excited about a real recovery

>>> Chiquita Brands(CBQ) Receives offer to be acquired at $13/shr by Cutrale Gro

Receives offer to be acquired at $13/shr by Cutrale Group And Safra Group (valued at ~$613M) 
- The proposal has been conveyed to Chiquita in a letter to Kerrii Anderson, Chairwoman of the Chiquita Board of Directors and Edward Lonergan, Chiquita President and Chief Executive Officer. Proposal also offers a superior valuation compared to Chiquita's historical trading multiples. The proposed price, including the assumption of Chiquita net debt, represents an 11.8x multiple of Chiquita's last twelve months reported Adjusted EBITDA." The proposed offer is not subject to any financing condition