>>> Gea Group working on two new acquisitions

Gea Group working on two new acquisitions 

Gea Group, the listed German maker of machinery for the food industry, is working on two new acquisitions, according to an interview published in Boersen-Zeitung.

As part of a conversation with the German-language daily, Chief Financial Officer Helmut Schmale said two prospective takeover deals currently are very close. He said Gea may make two or three takeovers this year.

He said that the company can certainly spend a further EUR 1.5bn on takeovers. However, he said Gea will proceed with caution and not buy at unreasonable prices.

Gea is striving for a regional spread in emerging markets and may add technologies, and M&A is its preferred method, he said.

Schmale said Gea management has identified certain fields in which the company should grow, including body care and pet food.

In general, Gea prefers not to compete with other bidders in auction situations, but to bring about acquisitions through its own contacts, Schmale said. A potential takeover candidate would typically be a company with turnover of between EUR 50m and EUR 100m, and Gea would only look at a more valuable company in a very special case, he said.

Boersen-Zeitung
Value

>>> Barron's summary: positive on GLW, LH; cautious on LC, ONDK

Barron's summary: positive on GLW, LH; cautious on LC, ONDK 

Cover story: Barron's looks at the field of 19 Republican presidential candidates and picks the strongest seven from among them, noting that though Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz will have staying power, the final contenders are likely to be Jeb Bush and Ohio governor John Kasich.

Features: 
1) Positive on GLW: Company has a strong pipeline of new products-including glass for new 4K ultrahigh definition TVs, which could usher in a new era of technology-and $1.50 per share in net cash on the balance sheet; 
2) Positive on LH: The second-largest U.S. medical-testing firm offers investors much to like as a shift toward specialty drugs drives companion medical tests, and company has better returns on invested capital than rival DGX; 
3) Positive on GE, GMCR, CVX, NWL, BID, GM: Board members have lately been buying shares in company, which could be a sign for investors of upcoming deals or market events that will send shares up; 
4) Cautious on LC, ONDK: Online lending firms, which have different models, remain unprofitable, and shares trade at multiples typical of Internet stocks, a sign investors may want to hold off for now.

Tech Trader: The next step forward in high-definition TV is so-called 4K technology, which promises even crisper pictures with greater detail; Networks and cable operators have been slow to offer content in the format, but NFLX, GOOG's YouTube, and other online streaming sites are stepping in; The technology "may mark a turning point in the cord-cutting pundits have long predicted," benefiting companies such as GLW and NVDA.

Trader: Most market strategists continue to believe the Fed will raise rates in September; Cash returns to investors through buybacks could hit $1T this year, according to Yardeni Research, nearly equal to all the operating earnings produced by S&P 500 companies; Positive on SBAC, AMT, CCI: Cellular-tower companies that transmit the majority of U.S. wireless data should benefit from DISH-TMUS tie-up.

Small Caps: Positive on IGT: Tie-up with Italy's Gtech should benefit both gaming companies and offer investors some benefits if the combined company restructures and expands its business.

Profile: Vassilis Dagioglu, portfolio manager, Dreyfus Dynamic Total Return fund, which uses income-producing investments to bolster capital gains for a higher total return; Dagioglu likes Germany and Japan, but is shoring the U.K. stock market.

Interview: Bo Knudsen, fund manager, Carnegie Asset Management (top picks: UNP, MCK, Fanuc, Keyence, Rakuten, Sensata Tech, HDFC).

Follow-Up: Positive on BKS: When company spins off its education division investors will see "an attractive business with good growth prospects that is buried inside the bookseller," with AMZN a potential suitor; Positive on TMUS: Barron's admits it made a wrong call on carrier, whose shares have returned nearly 41% since a cautious story last November.

European Trader: Positive on Clariant: Following a reboot, Swiss company "has a good formula for investment success" and an attractive growth profile; a takeover could offer investors a handsome windfall, but they stand to benefit even without one.

Asian Trader: Investors, including Paul Singer's Elliott Management, remain skeptical about the all-stock merger between Cheil Industries and Samsung C&T, with many observers suggesting there are few potential synergies.

Emerging Markets: With a number of international markets-including those in Brazil, Russia, China, Greece, and Turkey-in turmoil, currency remains the big wild card; "The spread between winners and losers in emerging markets is going to be wider than normal," says SCHW's Liz Ann Sonders.

Commodities: "Observers of the rice market worry that there could be a repeat of the food crisis of 2008. If there is, prices could soar from current depressed levels."

Streetwise: Cautious on C: Bank "stands out as the poster child for too-big-to-succeed," though it is aware of its problems and has been trimming down to transform itself.

>>> EU's Juncker said to have refused request from PM Tsipras for phone conversa

EU's Juncker said to have refused request from PM Tsipras for phone conversation on Saturday after Athens deemed latest proposal from creditors as "absurd" - financial press 
- Juncker: "Alexis Tsipras, my friend, had promised that by Thursday evening, he would present a second alternative proposal... I have never received this alternative proposal... Friendship, in order to be maintained, has to observe some minimum rules." 
- Disappointed with Tsipras speech to Parliament; Creditors await alternative proposal from Athens.
- May meet with Tsipras on Wednesday if Greece presents new proposal.
- European Commission official: "President Juncker and Prime Minister Tsipras will certainly stay in contact in the coming days."
- Greek Fin MIn Varoufakia: Creditors requests were "borderline insulting... It was an aggressive move designed to terrorise the Greek government." 
- France Fin Min Sapin: No agreement can be possible with Greece after the end of June.
- Grexit would not be financial catastrophe for eurozone.
- Follow-up: Hollande, Merkel, and Tsipras are holding a new round of Greek debt crisis talks.

(BFW) Actelion Declines to Comment on Shire Approach Report


MORE: Actelion Declines to Comment on Shire Approach Report
2015-06-07 13:13:56.742 GMT


By Andy Hoffman
(Bloomberg) -- Actelion Ltd. declines to comment on report
that Shire approached it with an offer that valued the company
at about GBP12.4b.

* “We don’t comment on market rumors,” Andrew Weiss, head of
investor relations and corporate communications at Actelion,
said by phone
* Shire didn't immediately respond to a request for a comment
* NOTE: Shire Approached Actelion in Recent Weeks: Sunday
Times


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(BFW) Apple Music Announcement Monday, Sony Exec Says: VentureBeat



Apple Music Announcement Monday, Sony Exec Says: VentureBeat
2015-06-07 13:31:30.129 GMT


By Dan Hart
(Bloomberg) -- Apple will announce music streaming service
tomorrow at World Wide Developers Conference, Sony Music CEO
Doug Morris tells VentureBeat in interview.

* NOTE: Earlier this month, Apple Said to Push to Complete
Streaming Music Deal Before Event

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Joe Sabo

(BFW) Deutsche Wohnen CEO Says Deutsche Annington Merger Possible: HB



Deutsche Wohnen CEO Says Deutsche Annington Merger Possible: HB
2015-06-07 14:23:12.883 GMT


By Alessandro Speciale
(Bloomberg) -- Merger could make sense from capital-market
point of view, Deutsche Wohnen CEO Michael Zahn says interview
with Handelsblatt.

* Reason for merger would be increased competition
* NOTE: Deutsche Wohnen Declines on Plan to Sell $1.1 Billion
of Shares


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(BFW) UBS Former CFO John Cryan to Succeed Deutsche Bank’s Jain: FT



BN 06/07 11:35 *UBS FORMER CFO JOHN CRYAN TO SUCCEED DEUTSCHE BANK'S JAIN: FT

UBS Former CFO John Cryan to Succeed Deutsche Bank’s Jain: FT
2015-06-07 11:39:20.436 GMT


By Mike Harrison
(Bloomberg) -- John Cryan, former CFO of UBS, will succeed
Anshu Jain as CEO of Deutsche Bank, the Financial Times reports
on its website, without saying where it got the information.

* Cryan currently sits on Deutsche’s board: FT
* Deutsche Bank Co-CEOs Jain, Fitschen Will Resign, WSJ
Reports Link


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(BFW) Deutsche Bank Co-CEOs Jain, Fitschen Said Planning to Step Down



Deutsche Bank Co-CEOs Jain, Fitschen Said Planning to Step Down
2015-06-07 12:00:51.0 GMT


By James Amott
(Bloomberg) -- Deutsche Bank co-CEOs Anshu Jain and Juergen
Fitschen are planning to resign, a person familiar with the
matter said.

* NOTE: Related story
* Deutsche Bank supervisory board said to meet Sunday on
succession
* Jani said to leave at end of June, Fitschen at next AGM
* The person asked not to be identified before an announcement
is made


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(BFW) Russia Has ‘Less And Less Hope’ Ukraine Truce Pact Will Work



Russia Has ‘Less And Less Hope’ Ukraine Truce Pact Will Work
2015-06-06 03:00:00.18 GMT


By Elena Mazneva
(Bloomberg) -- Sudden fighting in eastern Ukraine this week
is “a full-scale violation” of Minsk truce pact, Kremlin’s
spokesman Dmitry Peskov says on conf. call w/ reporters.

* There’s “less and less hope and more and more worries”
about chances for fully implementing peace accord
* Situation has been changing since Russian President Vladimir
Putin several days ago told Italian newspaper Il Corriere
della Sera that there were “no large-scale hostilities:
Peskov
* What hasn’t changed is that ‘‘everything for the peace’’ was
settled in Minsk pact: Peskov
* NOTE: June 3, Ukraine Fighting Flares as Government Warns of
Rebel Push


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wkennedy3@bloomberg.net
Carolina Millan, Jim Silver