(BFW) SocGen Sees Gold Prices Dropping Below $1,000/Oz in 2016


SocGen Sees Gold Prices Dropping Below $1,000/Oz in 2016
2014-06-04 19:21:24.183 GMT


By Millie Munshi
     June 4 (Bloomberg) -- In 2016, “the Fed is likely to hike
rates at a much faster pace than currently discounted by the
market,” analysts led by Michael Haigh, the head of commodities
research, said in a report.
  * Bullion to trade “well below” $1,200 next year
  * “We continue to recommend selling gold rallies as we
    believe that gold is in a multi-year downtrend driven by the
    prospect of US rate hikes”
  * SocGen sees copper falling toward $6,500/mt “over the
    coming months on rising supply and the weakening Chinese
    housing sector”
  * The bank said it raised its outlook for soybean prices on
    “strong demand,” and that coffee prices are “fairly
    valued at current levels, for the remainder of the year”
  * SocGen raised 3Q soybean forecast by 33c to $13.38/bu


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

To contact the editor responsible for this story:
Millie Munshi at +1-212-617-5543 or
mmunshi@bloomberg.net

FT : Twitter weighs online music acquisitions

Twitter weighs online music acquisitions

Twitter has considered buying online music services including Soundcloud and Spotify in recent months – a move that suggests it is willing to attempt its largest acquisition to secure new sources of growth.
The online messaging platform has weighed up deals worth billions of dollars as it seeks to add a music service to its offering, according to three people familiar with the matter.

Twitter has been trying to boost the amount of time people spend on its app, after coming under fire from Wall Street for slowing user growth. Its shares have almost halved in value in the year to date, as investors worry that the social network would get stuck at just a fifth the size of Facebook.
Twitter had experimented with its own music app, Twitter Music, but this failed to catch on and was shut down in March. It had aimed to encourage more conversation about music between Twitter users and to help them discover new tracks. Twitter has since partnered with Billboard to chart the most talked about bands on its network.
Its renewed interest in offering a music service comes as Apple acquires Beats, the headphones and content streaming company founded by Dr Dre and Jimmy Iovine.
Ali Rowghani, Twitter’s chief operating officer, has been the driving force behind its search for a music company, people familiar with the process said. He recently entered talks with Soundcloud, the Berlin-based audio site where musicians can upload their tracks, the people added.
Soundcloud was valued at $700m in a funding round in January. That was more than double the $300m that Twitter spent on its largest acquisition so far, the mobile advertising exchange MoPub, which it bought in September 2013. Soundcloud is backed by venture capital firms including Union Square Ventures, Index Ventures and Kleiner Perkins.

Mr Rowghani also considered bids for Soundcloud’s rivals Spotify, the music streaming service valued at $4bn at the end of last year, as well as Pandora, the New York listed group that has a market capitalisation of almost $5bn. However, people familiar with the process said Twitter did not engage in talks with those companies.
Twitter’s plans to acquire Soundcloud were abandoned after internal disagreements over the profitability of audio advertising and concerns over copyright problems.
Twitter has been one of the most acquisitive technology companies, snapping up start-ups ranging from Vine, the six-second video clip service, to analytics companies that can enhance its offering to advertisers. Most recently, the company bought Gnip, a provider of social data, for an undisclosed sum.
But analysts have noted that Twitter does not have large sums of cash with which to buy a music service. It raised $2.1bn in its initial public offering last year and has secured a $1bn credit line, but remains unprofitable.
Twitter and Soundcloud declined to comment.

>>> Fed Beige Book Excerpts

Fed Beige Book Excerpts
- All twelve Federal Reserve Districts report that economic activity expanded during the current reporting period. The pace of growth was characterized as moderate in the Boston, New York, Richmond, Chicago, Minneapolis, Dallas, and San Francisco Districts, and modest in the remaining regions.
- Compared with the previous report, the pace of growth picked up in the Cleveland and St. Louis Districts but slowed slightly in the Kansas City District.
- Consumer spending expanded across almost all Districts, to varying degrees.
- Although improved weather generally gave a boost to business, lingering wintry weather in the Northeast continued to weigh on sales in parts of the Boston and New York Districts.
- Increasingly strong new vehicle sales were reported by more than half the Districts, with most other regions seeing steady sales; demand was generally reported to be less robust for used vehicles than for new vehicles.
- Manufacturing activity expanded throughout the nation, and at an increasingly strong pace in a number of Districts--notably along the East Coast, as well as in the St. Louis and Kansas City Districts.
- Residential real estate activity was mixed across the country, with some reports of low inventories constraining sales--specifically in the Boston, New York, and Kansas City Districts. Still, home prices continued to increase across most of the country, while the markets for both condos and apartment rentals were mostly robust. Residential construction activity was mixed, with half the Districts reporting increases but a few indicating some weakening in activity; multi-family construction remained particularly robust.
- Both non-residential construction activity and commercial real estate markets were generally steady to stronger since the last report.
- Overall lending activity increased throughout the nation. Credit quality and delinquency rates generally improved, while credit standards were mostly unchanged.Among Districts reporting on agriculture, drought conditions caused problems in the Dallas and San Francisco Districts, and, to a lesser extent, in the Chicago District; conversely, Atlanta and Minneapolis reported that excessive moisture delayed plantings.
- Labor market conditions generally strengthened in the latest reporting period, with hiring activity steady to stronger across most of the country, and several Districts reporting shortages of skilled workers. In most Districts, wage increases have remained generally subdued, though Chicago and Dallas noted increased costs for health benefits. Prices of both inputs and finished goods and services were mostly steady to up slightly.


(BN) Medtronic Said to Evaluate Takeover Bid for Smith & Nephew (1)


Medtronic Said to Evaluate Takeover Bid for Smith & Nephew (1)
2014-06-04 18:09:49.111 GMT


     (Updates with trading in fifth paragraph.)

By Matthew Campbell, Manuel Baigorri and Michelle Fay Cortez
     June 4 (Bloomberg) -- Medtronic Inc., one of the world’s
largest medical-device makers, is evaluating a takeover of
London-based Smith & Nephew Plc that could see the U.S. company
move its tax domicile overseas, people familiar with the matter
said.
     Smith & Nephew, with a market value of about 9.5 billion
pounds ($15.9 billion), is aware of Medtronic’s interest as are
investment banks, said two of the people, asking not to be named
discussing a private matter. Medtronic’s preparations for a bid
are at an early stage and no offer is imminent, the people said.
     Medtronic is a more serious bidder for Smith & Nephew than
Stryker Corp., another U.S. maker of medical devices, said one
of the people. Last week, in response to a Financial Times
report, Stryker Chief Executive Officer Kevin Lobo said the
company was in the early stages of evaluating a bid.
     The largest medical-device companies are banding together
to compete as hospitals cut costs to accommodate price pressure
resulting from the U.S. Affordable Care Act. Medical centers are
looking for only a handful of companies to provide a wide range
of products, and the leaders of both Medtronic and Johnson &
Johnson have said they are looking for scale and planning to
bundle their device offerings.
     Medtronic rose 3.3 percent to $63.03 as of 2:01 p.m. in New
York. Smith & Nephew closed up 3.3 percent in U.K. trading
today. With a market value of more than $61 billion, Medtronic
had $14.2 billion in cash and equivalents at the end of April,
data compiled by Bloomberg show.
     Spokesmen for Medtronic, based in Minneapolis, and Smith &
Nephew declined to comment.

                       Inversion Structure

     The transaction would probably be structured as a tax
inversion, with Medtronic using Smith & Nephew’s corporate shell
to move its legal residence to the U.K., the people said. The
gap between the 35 percent federal tax rate and much lower
levies in some European countries is spurring such deals --
including Pfizer Inc.’s now shelved effort to acquire
AstraZeneca Plc. The U.K. has a 21 percent corporate income tax
rate.
     Medtronic’s Chief Executive Officer Omar Ishrak has said he
wouldn’t rule out a tax-inversion deal.
     “Strategically, we do have this current problem that we
have a lot of cash outside the U.S.,” he said in a May 20
telephone interview. “We encourage some kind of U.S. tax reform
that allows us access to that cash in a more reasonable way.”

                          Domino Effect

     The company is looking to broaden its offerings in its
three key areas -- heart, muscle and skeleton and diabetes
products, Ishrak said.
     “We intend to fill these areas out and we want to
globalize,” he said.
     A purchase of Smith & Nephew, which sells implants for knee
and hip surgeries as well as for repairing traumatic injuries,
would be the latest in the $45 billion orthopedic market. J&J’s
$21.3 billion purchase of Synthes Inc. in 2012  set off a domino
effect among the half-dozen rivals that make devices to replace
hips and knees, treat sports injuries and bolster the spine.
     J&J sold its global trauma business to Biomet Inc. for $280
million to win regulatory approval for the Synthes deal. Zimmer
Holdings Inc. agreed to acquire Biomet, its cross-town rival in
Warsaw, Indiana, for $13.4 billion in April.
     Medtronic’s preparations were complicated by news of
Stryker’s interest, one of the people said. Smith & Nephew’s
shares have gained more than 7 percent since the May 29 report.


For Related News and Information:
Zimmer Buys Biomet for $13.4 Billion to Gain in Orthopedics
NSN N4JXLA6TTDSR <GO>
Smith & Nephew 6% Premium for ArthroCare Lures Rivals: Real M&A
NSN N0JQDV6VDKI5 <GO>
Smith & Nephew to Buy ArthroCare for $1.7 Billion in Cash (4)
NSN N0FUXM6S972M <GO>
Merger analysis: MA <GO>
Top health news: HTOP <GO>

--With assistance from Jeffrey McCracken and David Welch in New
York and Makiko Kitamura in London. 

To contact the reporters on this story:
Matthew Campbell in London at +44-20-3525-8684 or
mcampbell39@bloomberg.net;
Manuel Baigorri in London at +44-20-3525-4457 or
mbaigorri@bloomberg.net;
Michelle Fay Cortez in Minneapolis at +1-612-991-8887 or
mcortez@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story:
Mohammed Hadi at +1-212-617-2914 or
mhadi1@bloomberg.net;
Aaron Kirchfeld at +44-20-3525-8830 or
akirchfeld@bloomberg.net
Elizabeth Wollman

>>> FED Beige Book : manufacturing expanded in all twelve districts; wage increa

Fed Beige Book: manufacturing expanded in all twelve districts; wage increases have remained subdued

Full Document {http://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/beigebook/beigebook201406.htm}

FEDERAL RESERVE BEIGE BOOK: ECONOMIC ACTIVITY EXPANDED DURING CURRENT REPORTING PERIOD; GROWTH WAS MODEST TO MODERATE IN MOST REGIONS

All twelve Federal Reserve Districts report that economic activity expanded during the current reporting period. The pace of growth was characterized as moderate in the Boston, New York, Richmond, Chicago, Minneapolis, Dallas, and San Francisco Districts, and modest in the remaining regions. Compared with the previous report, the pace of growth picked up in the Cleveland and St. Louis Districts but slowed slightly in the Kansas City District. 

Consumer spending expanded across almost all Districts, to varying degrees. Non-auto retail sales grew at a moderate pace across most of the country: Although improved weather generally gave a boost to business, lingering wintry weather in the Northeast continued to weigh on sales in parts of the Boston and New York Districts. Increasingly strong new vehicle sales were reported by more than half the Districts, with most other regions seeing steady sales; demand was generally reported to be less robust for used vehicles than for new vehicles. Tourism was steady to stronger across most of the country--particularly in most of the eastern seaboard Districts. 

Activity in the service sector, excluding finance, grew across most reporting Districts, though New York and San Francisco reported a mixed performance. Boston, Kansas City, and San Francisco noted particular strength among technology firms. Transportation activity strengthened in most Districts reporting on that sector, with Richmond and Atlanta observing brisk growth in port activity, and Cleveland noting a rebound from weather-related weakness in the prior report. Manufacturing activity expanded throughout the nation, and at an increasingly strong pace in a number of Districts--notably along the East Coast, as well as in the St. Louis and Kansas City Districts. 

Residential real estate activity was mixed across the country, with some reports of low inventories constraining sales--specifically in the Boston, New York, and Kansas City Districts. Still, home prices continued to increase across most of the country, while the markets for both condos and apartment rentals were mostly robust. Residential construction activity was mixed, with half the Districts reporting increases but a few indicating some weakening in activity; multi-family construction remained particularly robust. Both non-residential construction activity and commercial real estate markets were generally steady to stronger since the last report. 

Overall lending activity increased throughout the nation. Roughly two-thirds of the Districts reported rising loan demand, with particular strength reported in New York and San Francisco. Credit quality and delinquency rates generally improved, while credit standards were mostly unchanged. Among Districts reporting on agriculture, drought conditions caused problems in the Dallas and San Francisco Districts, and, to a lesser extent, in the Chicago District; conversely, Atlanta and Minneapolis reported that excessive moisture delayed plantings. Energy industry activity strengthened in most Districts, though coal production was steady in Cleveland and declined in the Richmond District. 

Labor market conditions generally strengthened in the latest reporting period, with hiring activity steady to stronger across most of the country, and several Districts reporting shortages of skilled workers. In most Districts, wage increases have remained generally subdued, though Chicago and Dallas noted increased costs for health benefits. Prices of both inputs and finished goods and services were mostly steady to up slightly.

- Most Districts reported that wage pressures remained subdued since the previous report, although an increase in the cost of health insurance was noted in Chicago and Dallas. According to reports from the New York, Philadelphia, Richmond, Minneapolis, Kansas City, Dallas, and San Francisco Districts, to the extent that wage increases were observed, they were concentrated among highly skilled workers in information technology, engineering, professional services, and some of the skilled trades. 

- Price pressures were said to be contained, as most Districts reported that both input and finished goods prices were little changed or up only slightly since the previous report. However, high or rising prices for some agricultural commodities, construction materials, energy products, and precious metals were cited by some Districts.

Orange May Seek EU2.3b From Iliad for Bouygues Assets: Les Echos

+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+

Orange May Seek EU2.3b From Iliad for Bouygues Assets: Les Echos 2014-06-04 16:02:04.792 GMT

By Alexis Xydias June 4 (Bloomberg) -- Orange wants to sell Bouygues Telecom’s mobile network and some wireless frequencies to Iliad’s Free for EU2.2b-2.3b, Les Echos reports, without saying where it got the information. * Move would be part of a Orange-Bouygues merger: Les Echos * Free weighing investing in fiber along with Orange: Les Echos * MORE: Orange in Talks With Bouygues as Minister Calls for Telecom M&A {NSN N5NVBH6TTDSG<GO>}

Link to Company News:{ORA FP <Equity> CN <GO>} Link to Company News:{EN FP <Equity> CN <GO>} Link to Company News:{ILD FP <Equity> CN <GO>}

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

To contact the reporter on this story: Alexis Xydias in Paris at +33-1-5365-5019 or axydias@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Steve Rhinds at +33-1-5365-5072 or srhinds@bloomberg.net

WSJ : Siemens Could Struggle to Turn Alstom

Siemens Could Struggle to Turn Alstom

Siemens SIE.XE +0.40% is still powering up for a move on Alstom. ALO.FR -0.03% With just more than a week until the German conglomerate's deadline for deciding whether to counter General Electric's GE -0.60% offer for Alstom's energy business, putting out a proposal that will win over Alstom's board looks challenging.

GE set the bar high with its $17 billion offer at the end of April. The GE bid values Alstom's power business at 7.9 times earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, a hefty premium to Alstom's group valuation.

GE's all-cash proposal should appeal to Alstom. The French company has struggled with its debt for more than a decade. Selling its energy business to GE would leave Alstom with €7.27 billion ($9.9 billion) in net cash based on UBS UBSN.VX -0.28% estimates. That is equivalent to 80% of its market capitalization. Alstom has said it would return some to shareholders. But it could also look at purchases to bolster the remaining transport business.

In contrast, the deal that makes most sense for Siemens is one that minimizes its cash outlay and includes the disposal of its rail business to Alstom. For Siemens, that would remove a business that is a drag on group profit margins while simplifying the group to one focused on energy and automation.

Siemens's preliminary analysis put an enterprise value on Alstom's energy assets of €10.5 billion to €11 billion, according to an April letter to the Alstom board. Siemens's rail assets, including its valuable signaling business, are worth €3.3 billion, estimates UBS. That suggests a Siemens offer might not include much more than €7 billion in cash.

Furthermore, while GE and Alstom's power businesses have virtually no overlap, a Siemens deal could raise antitrust concerns in both power and rail. To soothe political headaches, GE has also committed to adding a net 1,000 new jobs in France over the next three years. But both Siemens and Alstom could need to cut jobs to deliver cost savings.

So a report this week suggesting the French and German governments could take stakes in the new Alstom via a Siemens deal is hardly comforting. That may not factor into Siemens's plans. But it adds to the impression of a Franco-German tie-up risking the creation of another underperforming European champion.

Siemens's pursuit of Alstom has barely started. But it already looks to be running low on steam.

(Le Figaro) Bouygues / Orange: Plan de Bercy


Bercy would set up a scenario to return to three telecom operators, according to Les Echos Wednesday. To accelerate the deployment of very high speed and cover the entire population by 2022, the government will support the acquisition of Bouygues Telecom in Orange , while associating Free to pojet.

"The first phase of this plan. Incumbent redeem number three and Bouygues ascend to the Orange capital, possibly by buying shares on the market to hold a controlling minority Step, resell Orange mobile network Bouygues Telecom and some of its frequencies Free Mobile "for" an amount of 2.2 to 2.3 billion euros, "say the Echos.

Finally, Free would undertake to co-invest alongside Orange to deploy a FTTH network in the territory.