WSJ Renault May Take Russia Wheel From General Motors


Renault May Take Russia Wheel From General Motors
GM’s Russian Retreat Opens Opportunities for Rivals

Fatigue is setting in for car makers in Russia.

General Motors Co. this week decided to close its St. Petersburg plant and stop selling most locally manufactured Opel and GM cars. While Russia only accounted for about 2% of total sales last year, the country’s growth potential meant GM had pledged a $1 billion investment to increase capacity there only three years ago.

Low oil prices combined with economic sanctions, higher interest rates and a falling ruble are pummeling the Russian car industry. In 2014, the number of total vehicle registrations fell by 10.5% and is expected to drop by another 36% this year, according to IHS.

But for those with stamina, GM’S about-face could leave them with a bigger piece of the pie when the auto sector eventually recovers. Russia is still seen as a source of longer-term growth, thanks to a burgeoning middle class and relatively low car ownership compared with developed markets.

One potential beneficiary could be Renault, which has been among the most aggressive foreign auto manufacturers to grab market share. It has a joint venture with Russian auto maker Avtovaz . Despite losses of €182 million ($194 million) from the venture in 2014, Renault has reiterated plans to increase production and market share in Russia.

The hope is that Renault can grow through the downturn. The expected weakness of the euro against the dollar should give it an edge in cutting prices, compared with U.S. rivals. Its tie-up with a local partner is another advantage, although it would also make it more difficult and costly for Renault to extricate itself if required.

The worry is that any turnaround in Russia’s car market looks increasingly distant. For a sales recovery to be sustainable, two key things need to happen: Oil prices must stabilize and geopolitical sanctions must ease. Neither looks likely.

If the recovery takes too long, the infrastructure supporting car manufacturers may begin to deteriorate. GM was one of the oldest and biggest investors in the Russian auto industry, and its decision to cut loose may mean others including car parts suppliers do the same. This could hamper auto makers’ ability to meet regulatory targets for localized manufacturing.

When Russia’s auto industry eventually emerges from the doldrums, there could be opportunities for those who have stayed the course. But, for now, long-distance driving in the country is becoming more arduous.

MAKOR: DRC SIEMENS: Too tight, Hedge with a chinese pos. BHI/HAL


Looking into more details at DRC / Siemens and the view that the Merger Agreement is much tighter when it comes to Siemens Obligation to do everything they can to meet regulators demands to close this transaction successfully. 

Arguably this limits Siemens ability to walk away "thanks" to regulatory hurdle, but I think the spread at the current level does not reflect the risk and downside of this deal. 

Siemens has obligations to do everything to meet regulators requirements for the transaction to close, but the regulator, in this particular case the EU has no obligation at all, and unlike the FTC which keeps a very econometrics approach when it reviews transaction, the EC has a much more political view which in my view creates uncertainties that are not reflected yet at the current price. We are yet to see a decision on a Phase 2 deal of that complexity by the new commissioner. Jazztel is likely to be the first one. 

When you see the caution with which MRK is taking to comment on the EC and other regulators process, I cannot help myself but to wonder about the new risk in this trade.

Another thing that should be priced into the risk associated with DRC / SIE now is the end date at which SIE can walk away. 31/12/2015 and Siemens can walk away, it's more than 8 months away but still If the EU stops the clock there are under no obligation. 

With this in mind Office Depot looks like a better deal in term of risk reward and downside as well as being administered by a better regulator but still offers 2% more than DRC in return on an annualized basis. 

If you still want to keep exposure to the deal given the potential return a Chinese position in BHI/HAL could be an interesting angle as the spread at below 15% annualized is way too tight, and the regulatory process could prove even more complicated than for DRC / SIE, and a brake in DRC would trigger a widening of BHI/HAL. SIAL/MRK and TRW offer lower return but much better risk profile.

RTR - Oil falls back on dollar, Kuwait stance that OPEC won't slow output

Oil falls back on dollar, Kuwait stance that OPEC won't slow output


NEW YORK (Reuters) - Oil prices fell on Thursday as a rebounding dollar and Kuwait's stance that OPEC had no choice but to keep producing in an oversupplied market undercut a rally from the previous day.

Benchmark Brent oil and U.S. crude were down about 2 percent each, weighed by the dollar's rise against most currencies after the greenback's biggest tumble in 18 months on Wednesday.

In the previous session, Brent rose nearly 5 percent and U.S. crude about 3 percent on the dollar weakness.

"It's dollar play all over again today," said Phil Flynn, analyst at the Price Futures Group in Chicago. "The fact that the oil market is oversupplied is a given, so the only real variable now are currency moves and how they impact commodities demand."

A stronger dollar weakens demand from holders of other currencies for commodities denominated in the greenback. The dollar rose 2 percent against the euro EUR= on Thursday, after its selloff on Wednesday on disappointment over the lack of a clear timeline for a U.S. interest rate hike. [USD/]

Brent oil LCOc1 was down $1.18 to $54.73 a barrel by 11:46 a.m. EDT (1546 GMT). It rallied more than $2, or about 5 percent, on Wednesday after the U.S. Federal Reserve hinted at a slower rate hike process than previously thought.

U.S. crude CLc1 fell 82 cents to $43.84.

In Kuwait, oil minister Ali al-Omair said OPEC had to keep production steady, although he voiced concern about oil prices having been halved since the previous summer. [ID:nL6N0WL1AQ]

"We don’t want to lose our share in the market," the minister said, reinforcing comments by OPEC kingpin Saudi Arabia of the need for members of the producer group to defend its output against rival shale oil producers in the United States and other non-OPEC nations.

While oil firms have slashed exploration budgets and the number of U.S. rigs drilling for oil has fallen to four-year lows, shale output in the United States has barely slowed.

Last week alone, U.S. crude stockpiles rose by 9.6 million barrels to reach above 458 million barrels, the highest in more than 80 years. [EIA/S]

In Lausanne, Switzerland, nuclear talks between Iran and six major powers showed major differences remaining toward a deal, providing some support to oil prices. Iran, an OPEC member whose oil exports have been restrained by sanctions related to its nuclear program, has said it will add another million barrels to the market when the sanctions come off. [ID:nL2N0WJ061]

(BFW) Zodiac Sees 1H Current Oper. Income Hurt by Seats Problems


Zodiac Sees 1H Current Oper. Income Hurt by Seats Problems
2015-03-19 16:56:11.520 GMT


By Brian Lysaght
(Bloomberg) -- Zodiac Aerospace says Seats solution was
longer, more costly than expected.
* Current operating income for 1H will be “significantly
impacted” by the difficulties in the Seats
* Sees FY current oper. income at similar level to last yr
* 1H Revenue up 16% to EU2.32b
* Link to Statement:Link
* Yday: Zodiac Under Pressure From Boeing, Airbus on
Delays: Reuters Link
* Yday: Zodiac Under Pressure From Boeing, Airbus on
Delays: Reuters Link</li></ul>
Link to Company News:{ZC FP <Equity> CN <GO>}
Link to Company News:{BA US <Equity> CN <GO>}
Link to Company News:{AIR FP <Equity> CN <GO>}

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:
Brian Lysaght at +44-20-3525-7908 or
blysaght@bloomberg.net

(BFW) BC Partners to Sell 25m Shrs in Com Hem in Accelerated Bookbuild


BN 03/19 16:50 *BC PARTNERS WILL HOLD ABOUT 35.6% OF COM HEM POST SALE
BN 03/19 16:49 *JP MORGAN AND MORGAN STANLEY JOINT BOOKRUNNERS IN COM HEM SALE
BN 03/19 16:48 *BC PARTNERS TO SELL 25M SHRS IN COM HEM
BN 03/19 16:48 *BC PARTNERS STARTS SALE OF COM HEM SHARES

BC Partners to Sell 25m Shrs in Com Hem in Accelerated Bookbuild
2015-03-19 16:57:13.546 GMT


By Tim Barwell
(Bloomberg) -- Shares offered at SEK75 to market price,
terms show; stock closed today at SEK77.25.
* BC Partners will hold 35.6% post sale; currently holds ~48%
of shrs outstanding, or ~98.9m shrs, according to Bloomberg
data
* Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan joint bookrunners

Link to Company News:{2496Z LN <Equity> CN <GO>}
Link to Company News:{COMH SS <Equity> CN <GO>}

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:
Tim Barwell at +44-20-3525-3512 or
tbarwell@bloomberg.net

(BFW) BC Partners to Sell 25m Shrs in Com Hem in Accelerated Bookbuild


BN 03/19 16:50 *BC PARTNERS WILL HOLD ABOUT 35.6% OF COM HEM POST SALE
BN 03/19 16:49 *JP MORGAN AND MORGAN STANLEY JOINT BOOKRUNNERS IN COM HEM SALE
BN 03/19 16:48 *BC PARTNERS TO SELL 25M SHRS IN COM HEM
BN 03/19 16:48 *BC PARTNERS STARTS SALE OF COM HEM SHARES

BC Partners to Sell 25m Shrs in Com Hem in Accelerated Bookbuild
2015-03-19 16:57:13.546 GMT


By Tim Barwell
(Bloomberg) -- Shares offered at SEK75 to market price,
terms show; stock closed today at SEK77.25.
* BC Partners will hold 35.6% post sale; currently holds ~48%
of shrs outstanding, or ~98.9m shrs, according to Bloomberg
data
* Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan joint bookrunners

Link to Company News:{2496Z LN <Equity> CN <GO>}
Link to Company News:{COMH SS <Equity> CN <GO>}

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:
Tim Barwell at +44-20-3525-3512 or
tbarwell@bloomberg.net

FT : Deutsche Bank shareholders push for sale of Postbank


Deutsche Bank shareholders push for sale of Postbank


Investors in Deutsche Bank are pushing for a sale of the group’s Postbank retail business as the German lender’s supervisory board prepares to meet on Friday to discuss the bank’s strategy review.

Germany’s biggest bank is looking for ways to bolster returns, faced with a combination of sluggish markets, litigation and tougher regulation that wiped 23 per cent off its share price in 2014 alone.


The bank has said it will unveil its new strategy in the second quarter and is expected to do so before its May 21 shareholders’ meeting. This will be a key moment for co-chief executives Anshu Jain and Jürgen Fitschen, whose previous targets the bank is likely to miss.

Retail banking in Germany is less profitable than in many other European countries because of fierce competition from the country’s proliferation of local savings banks and Germans’ traditional aversion to higher margin products, such as credit cards.

“[Deutsche] need to do a proper restructuring of their retail business, as the low returns there are making it very hard for them to achieve their group targets,” says Vincent Vinatier, a portfolio manager at AXA Investment Managers, one of Deutsche’s top 50 shareholders. “If they were to sell off part of Postbank, as well as their other retail businesses in the rest of Europe outside Germany, that would be quite convincing. Suddenly you would have a much cleaner story.”
Deutsche-Bank-chart
Other big shareholders have also been demanding Deutsche sell off part or all of Postbank, whose €144bn of assets generates relatively low returns but puts pressure on Deutsche’s under a new regulatory measure dubbed the leverage ratio.

Deutsche had a leverage ratio of 3.5 per cent in December, meaning it had 35 cents of equity for every €10 of assets — US banks have to increase their leverage ratios to at least 5 per cent and investors want Deutsche to be closer to the American norm. Getting to 5 per cent would require a more than €300bn reduction in the bank’s €1.7tn balance sheet, according to analysts, assuming no increase in equity.

The retail unit, which houses Postbank, managed a return on equity of only 6 per cent in 2014, giving it the worst return of the bank’s four core divisions. Deutsche has been targeting a 12 per cent return for the group as a whole by 2016.
Deutsche-Bank-chart
Deutsche bought into Postbank in 2008, but the unit has relatively little overlap with its other non-retail businesses, and some analysts reckon it is not so tightly woven into Deutsche that a deconsolidation would be impossible.

“The cost base in their retail business is almost €7bn, which is more or less where it was three years ago,” says Kinner Lakhani, an analyst at Citigroup. “That suggests that they are behind the curve on integration.”

Disposing of Postbank would deprive Deutsche of deposits that have helped to balance the wider group even though it has not been able to use excess deposits from the retail bank to finance its investment bank as originally hoped.

Under the net stable funding ratio that is part of the Basel III rule book, banks must finance their activities with sufficiently stable sources — such as retail and corporate deposits or long-term bonds — in order to mitigate the risk of future funding stress.
Deutsche-Bank-chart
Without Postbank’s deposits, people familiar with the situation say that Deutsche would need to make further heavy cuts in parts of its investment bank to still comply with the net stable funding ratio. The most likely area to be reduced would be the rates trading business and prime brokerage operations, which are both hit particularly hard by Basel III rules.

However, unlike rivals such as UBS, Barclays and RBS, which have drastically cut back their investment banking activities, Deutsche is likely to remain a big operator in the area — a stance that has some support among investors.

“Committing to investment banking is in principle the right strategy,” says Helmut Hipper, a fund manager at Union Investment, one of the 20 biggest shareholders in Deutsche. “In the good times, this is where you can make the best returns.”

Rival bankers point to the relative size of Deutsche’s investment banking business as a reason for not retreating further. While UBS had a sizeable wealth management business to fall back on, and RBS and Barclays have sizeable retail businesses, for Deutsche, investment banking is the powerhouse.
Deutsche-Bank-chart
The unit generated 43 per cent of net revenues in 2014, against retail’s 30 per cent. Its share of profits was even higher, since it makes higher returns.

“Deutsche doesn’t have a second engine,” says one rival, adding that to sustain a transformation it would be necessary to have another part of the business generating enough profits to keep overall earnings on track.

Deutsche could find its way there eventually, the banker says, if it were able to make acquisitions that would allow the bank to diversify its earnings.

With the bank’s share price trading at 61 per cent of book value, acquisitions are for now a distant prospect.
Deutsche-Bank-chart
However, Deutsche has other ways to grow. Its asset and wealth management business has become increasingly important over the past three years and, even without acquisitions, is likely to expand further.

With regulations in flux the bank’s last strategic review stopped short of making drastic changes. However, this time around investors say a more radical approach is needed.

“If by 2017 they have done a proper restructuring and they have managed a return on equity of 10 per cent, they won’t be trading at 0.6 times book,” says Mr Vinatier of Axa. “The scale of the upside is very significant. But they need to grab the bull by the horns.”

(Manager Magazin) DRC/Siemens `Integration' Not Going Smoothly

{http://www.manager-magazin.de/unternehmen/industrie/siemens-zukauf-dresser-rand-sperrt-sich-gegen-integration-a-1024471.html}

The preparations for the integration of the US of shares, Dresser-Rand in the Siemens group run rough. The outgoing Dresser-Rand boss Vincent Volpe ever new demands, parts of the Siemens Energy Business at the Texas manufacturer of compressors, small gas and steam turbines incorporate. This was reported by the manager magazine in its latest issue, which is available on Friday (March 20) in commerce.

manager magazin relies on Siemens' corporate circles. According to manager magazin is provided only Siemens' compressor business strike the Americans.
Siemens announced The € 7.6 billion dollar deal last September. However, the legal closing of the transaction (Closing) delayed further and becomes more expensive by at least 200 million dollars, as the manager magazine writes.

Surprisingly, the European Commission launched a few weeks ago an in-depth examination relating to antitrust concerns and ensure more recently extended the deadline on July 14. On 1 March, a late fee is charged to 43 million dollars a month.
The acquisition, with the Kaeser the oil and gas industry wants to conquer in the US, is criticized by many analysts as overpriced.

In the wake of the oil price decline Dresser-Rand 2014 failed with an annual operating profit of $ 288 million its own forecast by nearly $ 100 million. A Siemens spokesman declined to comment.