AOL Money & Finance

Kronos posts

Feed

After DoubleClick home run, Hellman & Friedman raised $8.4 billion fund

Private equity firm Hellman & Friedman LLC has been around since 1984. Over the years, the firm has built a tremendous team and expertise in a variety of domains.

And it paid off last week, when the fund sold DoubleClick to Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG) for a cool $3.1 billion (it was a 10X return over a couple years).

So, it's no surprise that H&F has raised its new fund – which stands at $8.4 billion (it's the firm's sixth fund). No doubt, with deals like DoubleClick, H&F has a lot of happy limited partners. One is the powerful California Public Employees' Retirement System.

Interestingly enough, H&F has already put its money to work from the new fund. That is, the firm recently agreed to buy Kronos Worldwide Incorporated (NYSE: KRON).

Although, to try to find good deals, it looks like H&F is ramping its global operations. And it certainly has the resources to do it.

Tom Taulli is the author of various books, including the Complete M&A Handbook and the EDGAR-Online Guide to Decoding Financial Statements.

Analyst downgrades 3-26-07: Boston Scientific & Vonage downgraded today

MOST NOTEWORTHY: Vonage Holdings Corp (VG), Boston Scientific Corp (BSX), Sunoco, Inc (SUN) and CV Therapeutics, Inc (CVTX) were some of today's more notable downgrades:
  • Vonage Holdings Corp (NYSEL VG) was downgraded to Underperform from Peer Perform at Bear Stearns following the court injunction barring Vonage from using Verizon Communications' (VZ) patented technology.
  • Boston Scientific Corp (NYSE: BSX) was cut to Market Perform from Outperform at BMO. Cowen removed Boston Scientific from its Focus List citing superior clinical results from Abbott Laboratories' (ABT) drug-eluting stent, Xience V.
  • Deutsche Bank downgraded Sunoco (NYSE: SUN) to Hold from Buy with a $72 target on valuation.
  • CV Therapeutics (NASDAQ: CVTX) was downgraded at Deutsche Bank, to Sell from Hold with a $2 target. The downgrade was ahead of the full Ranexa Merlin PIII data to be presented at the American College of Cardiology on Tuesday, March 27th, as the firm believes it will fall short of generating sufficient positive data trends for supporting Ranexa's outlook.
OTHER DOWNGRADES:
  • DaimlerChrysler (NYSE: DCX) was removed from JP Morgan's Focus List as the firm believes the potential divestiture of Chrysler is at least partially priced into shares; JP Morgan maintains an Overweight rating on the stock.
  • Morgan Stanley cut Progressive Corp (NYSE: PGR) to Underweight from Equal-Weight.
  • William Blair downgraded Kronos Inc (NASDAQ: KRON) to Market Perform from Outperform following the company's acquisition.
  • Bank of America downgraded Paxar Corp (NYSE: PXR) to Neutral from Buy on news of Avery Dennison Corp's (AVY) acquisition of the company.
  • Deutsche Bank cut Tesoro Corp (NYSE: TSO) to Sell from Hold with an $85 target.
  • Goldman Sachs cut Volvo (NASDAQ: VOLV) to Neutral from Buy on valuation.
Analyst summaries provided by TheFlyOnTheWall.com (subscription required).

Kronos software agrees to $1.8 billion buyout

Kronos Incorporated (NASDAQ: KRON), which provides workforce software, agreed to be acquired for $55 per share or $1.8 billion by the private equity firm Hellman & Friedman Capital Partners. That puts a valuation on the firm of about three times revenues.

Founded in 1977, Kronos focuses mostly on mid-size customers, helping them with scheduling, payroll and back-office services. The company charges a license fee for its offerings. Last year, Kronos expanded its business into talent management by acquiring Unicru.

As for Hellman & Friedman, the firm is no stranger to tech deals. Some of its buyouts include DoubleClick and Intergraph.

On news of the deal, Kronos' stock price increased 13.51% to $52.93. Also, the stock is up more than 50% since February.

Tom Taulli is the author of various books, including the Complete M&A Handbook and the EDGAR-Online Guide to Decoding Financial Statements.

Analyst upgrades 2-06-07: Credit Suisse upgrades Lear after Icahn bid

MOST NOTEWORTHY: Lear Corp (LEA) and Tellabs Inc (TLAB) were today's most notable upgrades:
  • Lear Corp (NYSE: LEA) was upgraded to Neutral from Underperform at Credit Suisse following the $2.31B cash bid from Carl Icahn.
  • Merrill Lynch upgraded Tellabs Inc (NASDAQ: TLAB) to Buy from Neutral, citing expectations for an improvement in cross-connect demand and margins; the firm expects Tellabs to benefit from AT&T's (NYSE: T) new broadband initiatives, a demand recovery at Cingular, T-Mobile 3G deployment plans and an increase in Sprint/Nextel (NYSE: S) base stations.

OTHER UPGRADES:

  • JP Morgan upgraded Nvidia Corp (NASDAQ: NVDA) to Overweight from Neutral based on expectations for gross margin upside to be driven by improved unit costs and market share gains in the notebook segment.
  • Raymond James upgraded shares of AirTran Holdings Inc (NYSE: AAI) to Outperform from Market Perform with a $14 target.
  • CIBC upgraded Kronos Inc (NASDAQ: KRON) to Sector Outperformer from Sector Perform, with a $46 target, as they find valuation attractive at current levels given their increasing confidence operations are improving.
  • State Street Corp (NYSE: STT) was upgraded to Equal Weight from Underweight at Morgan Stanley following the news of the Investors Financial Services Corp (NASDAQ: IFIN) acquisition.
  • Triad Hospitals Inc (NYSE: TRI) was upgraded to Neutral from Sell at Bank of America.
  • Overstock.com Inc (NASDAQ: OSTK) was upgraded to Neural from Sell at First Albany, as the worst is already reflected in the stock's valuation.
  • Matrix USA upgraded Estee Lauder Co Inc (NYSE: EL) to Hold from Sell based on fundamental trends.
Analyst summaries provided by TheFlyOnTheWall.com (subscription required).

Wal-Mart's just-in-time employees

According to the Wall Street Journal (subscription required), Wal-Mart Inc.'s (NYSE: WMT) latest innovation is to treat its employees just the same as its inventory. For too long, many of Wal-Mart's employees have had regular work schedules. Wal-Mart excels at stocking each store with the items that customers want to buy and shunning the rest; and it's finally dawned on management that Wal-Mart can apply this same just-in-time approach to putting employees in its stores.

Using a computer system similiar to one from Kronos, Inc. (NASDAQ: KRON), Wal-Mart will be able to schedule employees to maintain a constant ratio of employees to customers. (KRON's system tracks individual store sales, transactions, units sold, and customer traffic in 15-minute increments over seven weeks, and compares data to the prior year's, before scheduling workers.) Workers will need to be on call so they can arrive in the store in case they're needed. And more importantly for Wal-Mart's profits, workers who previously had regular shifts will have variable ones instead -- this should reduce Wal-Mart's labor costs.

I'm not a big Wal-Mart shopper but every time I've been in one of their stores, I've found the employees to be surly and unhelpful. And I would imagine that this new system will make Wal-Mart employees even more angry -- an emotion they'll share with customers. As I noted in Value Leadership, Sam Walton believed that if you treat employees well, they'll do the same for customers.

Treating Wal-Mart employees like just-in-time inventory must be making Walton turn over in his grave.

Peter Cohan is President of Peter S. Cohan & Associates, a management consulting and venture capital firm, and a Professor of Management at Babson College. He has no financial interest in Kronos or Wal-Mart.

Symbol Lookup
IndexesChangePrice
DJIA+30.6910,464.40
NASDAQ+6.872,176.05
S&P 500+4.981,110.63

Last updated: November 27, 2009: 03:52 AM

BloggingStocks Exclusives

Hot Stocks

DailyFinance Headlines

Latest from BloggingBuyouts

WalletPop Headlines

AOL Business News

BioHealth Investor Headlines

Sponsored Links

My Portfolios

Track your stocks here!

Find out why more people track their portfolios on AOL Money & Finance then anywhere else.

BloggingStocks Partners

More from AOL Money & Finance