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Bernie Madoff baseball cards?

Topps' 2009 Allen & Ginter baseball card set will include the usual mix of all-stars and utility players, with a special twist: Fraudsters like Bernie Madoff, Charles Ponzi and Enron will also be inserted in some packs as part of the "World's Biggest Hoaxes, Hoodwinks & Bamboozles" subset.

No word yet on whether Alex Rodriguez will be in the set as a regular baseball player or as a fraudster.

Continue reading Bernie Madoff baseball cards?

Will Topps (TOPP) balk at Upper Deck's buyout?

Upper Deck has advised Topps (NASDAQ: TOPP) that the waiting period under the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act of 1976 has expired with no request for additional information, satisfying one of the conditions of Upper Deck's tender offer for the company.

According to a press release put out by Topps:

Topps noted that it continues to negotiate with Upper Deck to see if a consensual transaction can be reached. Topps cautions, however, that there can be no assurance that a transaction will be reached with Upper Deck. The Topps Board has not withdrawn or amended its recommendation with respect to the merger agreement with The Tornante Company and Madison Dearborn Partners.

Topps is recommending that its shareholders accept the $9.75 bid from Tornante and Madison Dearborn when a $10.75 offer is on the table and the stock is currently trading at $10.14. I suppose that next we will hear that Topps is advising its shareholders to hand in their $10 bills for a five and four ones.

As I've written before on BloggingStocks, the management and board at Topps is looking more and more like a complete disgrace to corporate governance. The current management team has a deal in place allowing them to keep their jobs if Madison Dearborn and Tornante acquire the company, although most shareholders would agree that their leadership has been pathetic.

For more of my coverage of the battle for Topps, check out:

Will Eisner and Co. Collect Topps?

Upper Deck Gets Hostile in Pursuit of Topps

Upper Deck gets hostile in pursuit of Topps

When BloggingStocks's Tom Taulli wrote that Topps (NASDAQ: TOPP) had hit a single with it's agreement to be acquired by Madison Dearborn Partners and The Tornante Company, he realized a problem with the proposed buyout that has come to irritate many of the company's largest shareholders. The $9.75 per share offer wasn't much of a premium to the current share price, and left the company's long-term shareholders with a return on investment that was mediocre at best.

Then a grey knight arrived on the scene. Competitor Upper Deck came forward with an offer of $10.75 per share, but Topps rejected the offer, saying that Upper Deck had not demonstrated adequate financing and had failed to offer an adequate break-up fee. Topps also cited anti-trust concerns given that Topps and Upper Deck are the two biggest players in the trading card industry.

Having been spurned by Topps's management, Upper Deck is turning up the heat with a tender offer for all of the company's shares at $10.75 each, a premium of 10.25% to the $9.75 that Topps had previously agreed to be acquired at.

There's sure to be a lot more drama to come and the history of Topps had plenty of drama before this even started. Check out this Wikipedia entry for a nice overview of the company's history.

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Last updated: February 11, 2012: 10:10 PM

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