>>> IAG CEO to hold meetings with Irish government, unions in attempt to salvage

IAG CEO to hold meetings with Irish government, unions in attempt to salvage Aer Lingus takeover
International Consolidated Airlines Group (IAG) chief executive Willie Walsh will hold meetings with the Irish government and unions regarding its bid for Aer Lingus next week, the Financial Times reported. Walsh yesterday, 27 February indicated that he was not admitting defeat in IAG’s bid for the listed Irish airline and that he would hold meetings with trade unions and a review panel of the Irish government following his return from a presentation to investors, the item said.

The Irish government, which holds a 25% stake in Aer Lingus, said on Wednesday that it would want further assurances regarding employment and growth before it would consider selling its stake in the flag carrier. The government is particularly insistent on securing guarantees from IAG that it would retain its slots at Heathrow airport for Irish routes over and above the five year commitment offered by IAG, the item noted.

Walsh this month informed the Irish government that he would not extend the five year guarantee on Heathrow slots. The CEO said IAG was preparing a response to the Irish government’s demands, the article said. Walsh would not rule out making concessions, the item added.

Analysts cited by the newspaper said the Irish government is looking for a guarantee of up to 10 years on Aer Lingus’ slots at Heathrow. However, IAG would find it difficult to justify such concessions on commercial grounds, the analysts added.

One analyst cited by the report argued that the impasse could be broken by concessions on landing charges at the Irish airports that are most concerned about losing connections to Heathrow. However, it is more likely that IAG could provide more clarity on employment at Aer Lingus and expansion of transatlantic routes, while giving non-binding commitments regarding the Heathrow slots slightly beyond its five year commitment, the analyst said.

The Irish Times reported that Walsh will hold meetings with officials from the Irish Congress of Trade Unions and representatives from the Impact and Siptu unions. The unions are looking for reassurances on employment before they would think about supporting IAG’s bid, the item said.

Walsh, quoted in a report in The Times, said IAG’s proposed takeover of Aer Lingus is not a “must-do” acquisition. Walsh added that IAG would not pay too high a premium for Aer Lingus.

IAG has offered EUR 2.25 per share for Aer Lingus, valuing the airline at EUR 1.36bn (USD 1.52bn). Aer Lingus’ share price closed EUR 0.02 up at EUR 2.255 in Dublin yesterday, giving the airline a market capitalisation of EUR 1.20bn.
Financial Times, Irish Times, The Times

>>> SFR makes EUR 7.5bn offer for Bouygues Telecom, discussions ongoing



SFR makes EUR 7.5bn offer for Bouygues Telecom, discussions ongoing
Bouygues Telecom has been the subject of an offer of up to EUR 7.5bn from competing French telco SFR, according to the Journal du Dimanche.

The French-language weekly newspaper quoted sources it did not identify as saying that while that offer was spurned, SFR could up the ante next year and offer as much as EUR 8bn.

One source close to the bidder camp told the JDD that talks were not over and the issue of pricing remained key. Other sources mooted the likelihood that a better offer might come about within a matter of months.

The information came in the context of expected consolidation within the French telecoms space. Further key factors, according to the JDD, include any plans by Xavier Niel, another high-profile French entrepreneur. According to sources, the founder of Free is content participating in a four-player market. And another element is the planned auction over the next few months of 700 MHz frequencies by the French government. The JDD quoted regulator Sebastien Soriano who said that activity will clearly separate out long-term from short-term players.

As reported by this news service last week, Bouygues Telecom parent boss Martin Bouygues said that despite recent declarations from Altice’s (ATC:AMS) Chief Executive Dexter Goei saying his company would be the most natural buyer for Bouygues Telecom, there were no discussions at all. Altice subsidiary Numericable already paid EUR 3.9bn to acquire SFR from Vivendi.

Bouygues said on that occasion when the dust settles after the telecom wars of the last few years, Bouygues would be best placed to buy one of the French operators, be it Iliad’s (EPA:ILD) Free, Numericable-SFR (EPA:NUM) or Orange (ORA:FP). That is because of its low level of indebtedness which has fallen to EUR 3.2bn in 2014 against EUR 4.435bn in 2013.
Journal du Dimanche

>>> Sika bidder Saint-Gobain not prepared to discuss compromise solutions

Sika bidder Saint-Gobain not prepared to discuss compromise solutions
Sika, the listed Swiss chemicals group, has made compromise solutions to Saint-Gobain in an attempt to resolve the takeover battle, Schweiz am Sonntag reported.

Sika Chairman Paul Haelg told the Swiss Sunday newspaper he has made two suggestions to resolve the situation. The first which would see Saint-Gobain acquire 100% of Sika would be very expensive, therefore, Haelg suggested a compromise solution whereby Sika acquires Sain-Gobain's mortar business. Haelg said Saint-Gobain is not prepared to discuss what he described as constructive suggestions, and has not made any suggestions itself.

Haelg said the Sika and Saint-Gobain mortar businesses are competitors and there would be a conflict of interest should Saint-Gobain allow both to compete under the same roof as it would own 100% in its own unit (operating under the Weber brand) and only 16% in Sika's unit.

Schweiz am Sonntag

(BN) Austria on Track to Bail in Heta Creditors After Aid Cut Off (1)



Austria on Track to Bail in Heta Creditors After Aid Cut Off (1)
2015-03-01 19:38:17.427 GMT


(Updates with affected liabilities, consequences for unit
sale from seventh paragraph.)

By Boris Groendahl
(Bloomberg) -- Austria won’t give fresh capital to Heta
Asset Resolution AG, making the “bad bank” of failed Hypo
Alpe-Adria-Bank International AG the first case under new
European Union rules imposing losses on bank bondholders.
Austria cut off support for Heta, which has already cost
Austrian taxpayers about 5.5 billion euros ($6.2 billion) in
aid, after Heta notified the government it may need as much as
7.6 billion euros on top of that, the Finance Ministry said in a
statement on Sunday. The Finanzmarktaufsicht regulator put Heta
into resolution and ordered an immediate debt moratorium.
“The decision was triggered by information from Heta’s
management about the first results of an asset review,” the
ministry said. “Because of that dramatic change of the asset
evaluation, the ministry together with the entire government
decided not to invest any more tax money into Heta.”
Heta’s predecessor Hypo Alpe was nationalized in 2009 after
it was close to collapse because of bad loans in the western
Balkans and shareholders led by Bayerische Landesbank walked
away from the bank. Its rescue and wind-down has been
complicated by a string of court cases and by the fact that a
large part of its debt is guaranteed by the Carinthia province,
a former owner of the bank.

No Repayment

The FMA is taking over the wind-down of Heta, which kept
around 18 billion of Hypo’s assets when it was set up last year.
While it works out a resolution plan it won’t repay Heta’s
liabilities under an Austrian law that came into force Jan. 1 to
implement the European Union’s Bank Recovery and Resolution
Directive, the authority said in a statement.
The immediate debt moratorium means 950 million euros of
bonds due March 6 and March 20 won’t be repaid. It affects 9.8
billion euros in outstanding bonds, supplementary capital and
Schuldschein loans, 1.24 billion euros debt to Pfandbriefbank
(Oesterreich) AG, a bank that handles bond issues for Austrian
provinvial banks, as well as loans from BayernLB, according to
the FMA’s decree published on its website.
Putting Heta into resolution means there is no insolvency
procedure, the FMA said. An insolvency would have endangered the
sale of Hypo Group Alpe Adria AG, the “good” part of the
business that’s operating banks in the former Yugoslavia, which
was signed last year but isn’t completed yet, it said. An
insolvency would have made the sale of Heta’s remaining assets
more difficult and led to higher losses for creditors, it said.

Government Guarantee

Avoiding Heta’s insolvency also means that the Carinthia
province’s guarantees for Heta’s bonds aren’t triggered under
Austrian law, the finance ministry said. The ministry reiterated
that it will honor a federal government guarantee for a 1
billion-euro subordinated Heta bond, should it become due.
The FMA’s intervention caps a dramatic development over the
weekend that is described in the authority’s decree.
Heta notified the FMA Friday night at 9:20 p.m. Vienna time
that an asset review that started last year led to write-down
needs of as much as 8.7 billion euros, resulting in negative
equity of up to 7.6 billion euros. It wouldn’t have enough funds
to repay liabilities from next year, Heta told the FMA,
according to the document.
Shortly after that notification Friday night, Heta and the
FMA notified the Austrian government and asked whether it would
recapitalize Heta to make sure the liabilities are repaid. It
answered at 12:24 p.m. today that it wasn’t going to, according
to the document.

For Related News and Information:
Austria Adjusted Law to Allow Bail-In of Heta’s Senior Bonds
Heta Senior Bonds Due Next Month Drop as Austria Weighs Bail-In
Austria Handled Hypo Alpe Rescue Like Amateurs, Commission Says
Top Financial Regulation Stories: TOP FREG<GO>
Top Financial Stories: FTOP<GO>
Top Stories: TOP<GO>

To contact the reporter on this story:
Boris Groendahl in Vienna at +43-1-513-2660-12 or
bgroendahl@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story:
Patrick Henry at +32-2-237-4328 or
phenry8@bloomberg.net
Robin Stringer

Sonntagszeitung: Gategroup: Schmid on the ejector seat

http://www.sonntagszeitung.ch/read/sz_01_03_2015/wirtschaft/Schmid-auf-dem-Schleudersitz-28962 Type text or a website address or translate a document. Schmid on the ejection seat

Victor Weber, Cornelia Krause

Zurich Senior Board Andreas Schmid (Zurich Barry Callebaut AG, Oettinger Davidoff Group gate airport) is a fighter. But the General Assembly of the airline caterer Gate Group on 16 April he sees fear against heart. A group of shareholders challenge him openly. "It's about to overthrow Andreas Schmid. It is no longer acceptable, "said Rudolf Bohli, manager of hedge fund RBR Capital, a month before the newspaper" Finanz und Wirtschaft "(FuW).

Meanwhile Bohli has increased the pressure: The RBR Capital has recently formed with the British hedge fund Camox a master group that controls around 12 percent of the vote. The common goal: as many, if not all, of the Board of Directors to replace. "We want a clean cut. A better Directors as we could make this in any case. The candidates we have already found, "says Camox-founder Jonathan Herbert. The Camox Master Fund invests primarily in small to medium sized European companies are facing a turnaround or a breakthrough in product development and as promised fast earnings growth.

Opponents have been invited to a press conference

Camox-founder Herbert knows Gate Group well. He was already invested twice, most recently in 2011 but grew disappointed with management and stock performance again. In January, he bought back blocks of shares. After talking with Bohli germinated in him the hope of impending changes in the company.

Beginning of the year is also the American Wellington Management Group entered at Gate Group, their share is 4.3 percent. Also, Wellington is betting that the stock price rises when Schmid flies. Harris Associates controls 6.6 percent of the shares. The investment company invests only in companies, which it holds in the market for fundamentally undervalued.

For next Tuesday Rudolf Bohli invited to a press conference, to be presented at the four to five candidates for the Board.

Feverish search for compromise

The tug will meet with a broad interest. Because for Andreas Schmid, 57, the fate threatens to repeat. In August 2006, he threw as Chairman of the Kuoni Travel Group in the towel. He had fallen out with the Executive Committee and the Board of Directors, as he had done as president behind their backs merger talks with the British First Choice. In connection with his resignation, he announced to dispense with the Office of the President at Business Federation economiesuisse, he will compete would have three weeks later. In Economiesuisse Nicolas Hayek and Johann Schneider-Ammann were opposed to him. The reigning Bundesrat was then President of Swissmem.

The fall had Schmid was severely affected, as he admitted openly later, when he had caught again.

Whether the media briefing, scheduled on Tuesday will actually take place, but is not sure. On Friday afternoon, both parties have in fact taken to explore the possibility of a compromise, such as searches of the Sunday newspaper show. Now the chances are classified as intact on both sides to create a joint list of candidates for the renewal of the Board. Will hot: Newest to both sides adequately be represented on the Board. Only completely independent candidates are eligible, ie persons who are not in league in one form or another with the company. By the end of next week, if one is to agree on the composition of the Board in principle. Therefore, the probability is high that the press conference will be blown off, but that could be a reconciliation torpedoed.

The big question is whether Andreas Schmid will continue to be at the helm as president. For him it was yesterday Saturday still open. He must decide which the company will be better served. It Schmid go to the stability of gate Group and not individual people, said a confidant. The probability that Schmid retiring, was below 50 percent.

Another stumbling block is that Schmid has appointed Spaniard Xavier Rossinyol a new CEO who does not fit the rebellious shareholders. For Bohli is coming from the Basler travel retailer Dufry Rossinyol - he shall take office next month - a hideously bad Instrumentation: He was outside industry and have never owned redeveloped as number one. It also need a Swiss at the top of the former Swissair subsidiary. Bohli Schmid had suggested another candidate for the CEO post.

Groups Gate Mountain and Valley ride terms of profitability

For bank analysts who Gate Group on their radar, however, the appointment of the Spaniard was well received. Bohli seems to have now come to the conclusion that his public criticism of Schmid and Rossinyol had failed too coarse.

In the eyes Bohlis it needs a restructuring, because the costs are rising faster than revenues. The fact is that the Zurich Group for years on mountain and valley ride is terms of profit and loss. The Austrian competitor Do & Co, however, continuously improved its profitability. Gate Group dominates the airline catering business in Europe and the United States together with LSG Sky Chefs. How do Gate Group has struck in 2014, you will find out on March 12.

Undoing Schmid can be the poor performance of the share price. From the high of 53.50 francs, which was reached in January 2011, the course is far away. Schmid, of course, aware that he is vulnerable it. As Chairman of Kuoni he had said in 2005 ". The best protection is a high stock price»

The Board of gate Schmid Group is one of the last eight years. 2009, the Bureau was entrusted to him. 2013 he earned 398 000 francs. The Group employs over 27 000 people and generated sales of CHF 3 billion.

To think will also be the fact that the penetration rights of shareholders have been strengthened by Thomas Schmid Minders cheaters initiative. In addition, he was the one who had cut the restrictions on voting rights at Gate Group.

(NS5) HuffingtonPt(FR): TF1 dément la mort de Martin Bouygues



HuffingtonPt(FR): TF1 dément la mort de Martin Bouygues
2015-02-28 14:22:14.184 GMT

http://www.huffingtonpost.fr/2015/02/28/mort-martin-bouygues-dementi-tf1_n_6774836.html?utm_hp_ref=france

PageExcerpt:
MÉDIAS - TF1 et le groupe Bouygues ont démenti la mort de Martin Bouygues, annoncée un peu plus tôt à l'AFP par un maire d'une commune voisine de l'Orne où industrielle séjourne. Une journaliste de TF1, chaîne du groupe Bouygues, a par ...

(BFW) Lafarge Deal Terms Not Liked by Holcim Holders: DealReporter



Lafarge Deal Terms Not Liked by Holcim Holders: DealReporter
2015-02-27 20:58:22.842 GMT


By Joshua Fineman
(Bloomberg) -- Holcim holders increasingly against the
terms of deal with Lafarge, dealReporter said, citing 3 minority
holder sources, following Holcim investor roadshows.
* Holders want an improved exchange ratio
* Person close to Holcim told dR he had not heard negative
responses from the road show this week
* Holcim declined comment to dR
* NOTE: Earlier, Holcim-Lafarge Spread Widens; Helvea-Baader
Sees Risk to Deal
* Feb. 23, Holcim CFO Thomas Aebischer had said terms of
merger agreement with Lafarge remain intact, even after
the Swiss franc’s strengthening
* Feb. 23, Holcim CFO Thomas Aebischer had said terms of
merger agreement with Lafarge remain intact, even after
the Swiss franc’s strengthening</li></ul>


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

To contact the reporter on this story:
Joshua Fineman in New York at +1-212-617-8953 or
jfineman@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story:
Arie Shapira at +1-212-617-1488 or
ashapira3@bloomberg.net