VirginMedia posts
FeedPosted Apr 14th 2008 9:10AM by Laurie Pasternack (RSS feed)
Filed under: Newspapers, Magazines, Citigroup Inc. (C), ,
MAJOR PAPERS:
- Wachovia Corporation (NYSE: WB) could announce a capital infusion of several billion dollars from outside investors as early as Monday, people familiar with the matter said. While final terms of the deal are still being worked on, the Wall Street Journal reported that the bank is expected to receive between $6B-$7B, in return the investor group would receive shares priced at roughly $23-$24 per share.
- According to people familiar with the matter, the Wall Street Journal reported that Deutsche Bank AG (NYSE: DB) is seeking to sell as much as $20B in debt to a 'collection of investors,' which include private-equity firms.
OTHER PAPERS:
Posted Apr 10th 2008 11:05AM by Eric Buscemi (RSS feed)
Filed under: Analyst Reports, Analyst Upgrades and Downgrades, Pfizer (PFE)
MOST NOTEWORTHY: Patterson Companies, Virgin Media and MannKind were today's noteworthy downgrades:
- Patterson (NASDAQ:PDCO) was downgraded to Neutral from Outperform at Baird, as the firm's checks indicate industry fundamentals have softened and it sees greater near-term risk for dental consumables than dental equipment.
- Virgin Media (NASDAQ:VMED) was cut to Hold from Buy at Jefferies as they believe the company's results could be under pressure given the continued competitive activity and potential weakening of the UK economy.
- Piper downgraded shares of MannKind (NASDAQ:MNKD) to Neutral from Buy and lowered their target to $1.50 after Pfizer (NYSE:PFE) discontinued inhaled insulin Exubera due to an increase in lung cancer cases.
OTHER DOWNGRADES:
- Lehman cut Cheniere Energy (LNG) to Equal Weight from Overweight.
- Pantry (PTRY) was cut to Market Perform from Outperform at Friedman Billings.
- JP Morgan lowered Watsco (WSO) to Neutral from Overweight.
Posted Jul 13th 2007 9:10AM by Eric Buscemi (RSS feed)
Filed under: Newspapers, Magazines, General Electric (GE), Morgan Stanley (MS), Zoltek Co (ZOLT)
MAJOR PAPERS:
- General Electric Company (NYSE: GE) has hired Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS) to find a buyer for its WMC Mortgage subprime mortgage unit, signaling its exit from the mortgage business, reported the Wall Street Journal (subscription required).
- GE's CNBC cable business news channel and the Financial Times Group are in discussions to share resources and shore up their Web business, reported the Wall Street Journal.
- VeriSign Inc (NASDAQ: VRSN), which oversees dot-com and dot-net domain names registry, has recorded an additional $160M in compensation expenses related to stock option grants made between 1998 and 2006, causing the CFO to resign, reported the Wall Street Journal.
- The Financial Times (subscription required) reported that Virgin Media Inc (NASDAQ: VMED) has hired financial services company UBS AG (NYSE: UBS) yesterday to pursue strategic buyers.
OTHER PAPERS:
- From BusinessWeek's "Inside Wall Street" column:
Posted Jul 2nd 2007 9:00AM by Douglas McIntyre (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings Reports, Deals, Private Equity, Blackstone Group L.P (BX)
Carlyle Group is talking to British cable operator Virgin Media (NASDAQ: VMED) about taking over the company for about $20 billion. Blackstone (NYSE:BX) and KKR talked to the firm about a buy-out for $15 billion late last year, so the price is going up.
Virgin's market cap is only $8 billion, so any purchase would include the assumption of substantial debt.
The real question about Virgin is why anyone would want to own it. The company competes with a robust telecommunications industry which includes BT (NYSE: BT) and Vodafone (NYSE: VOD). Rupert Murdoch's British Sky Broadcasting (NYSE: BSY) delivers video services to large number of homes in the UK. Virgin hardly has an easy time competing. Murdoch's operation is taking subscribers from the cable company, and Virgin now routinely loses money.
Why would anyone want to pay a premium for it?
Douglas A. McIntyre is a partner at 24/7 Wall st.
Posted May 21st 2007 9:20AM by Eric Buscemi (RSS feed)
Filed under: Newspapers, Magazines, Internet, Google (GOOG), Microsoft (MSFT), Yahoo! (YHOO), Teva Pharm Indus ADR (TEVA), salesforce.com inc (CRM),
MAJOR PAPERS:
OTHER PAPERS:
- The U.K. Times reported that Warner Music Group Corporation (NYSE: WMG) is expected to offer EMI Group (OTC: EMIPY) a "£100 million sweetener" to try and keep the company from accepting an offer from private equity.
- According to The Observer, Royal Bank of Scotland (OTC: RBSPY), along with its partners Fortis and Banco Santander Central Hispano (NYSE: STD), hope to "table" a £47 billion offer for ABN Amro Holdings (NYSE: ABN) this week.
- The Observer reported that a private equity consortium is considering a $15 billion offer for Virgin Media Inc (NASDAQ: VMED).
- Cadbury Schweppes ADS (NYSE: CSG) is planning to return £5 billion to shareholders through a special dividend or share buyback, according to The Observer.
- The Sunday Telegraph reported that UBS AG (NYSE: UBS) will offer to buy out the pension schemes of some of the leading FTSE100 companies next week.
- Yahoo! Inc (NASDAQ: YHOO) may be looking to acquire British social networking site Bebo, the Sunday Telegraph reported.
- The Bollywood film producer, Eros International, is expected to announce a partnership with Google Inc's (NASDAQ: GOOG) YouTube, the Sunday Telegraph reported.
- Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Limited's (NASDAQ: TEVA) Copaxone will face generic competition for the first time, but will not see an impact immediately, Ha'aretz reported.
WEBSITES:
- The Orange County Register blog looked at a transcript from IndyMac Bancorp Inc's (NYSE: IMB) first quarter conference call, where the CEO Michael Perry said: "When you see that delinquency number in the press of 13% subprime delinquencies, it's hugely understated. It is absolutely hugely understated. And the prime delinquencies are overstated. The subprime delinquencies are more like 18, 20, 22% delinquencies and that's where I think you're going to see the problems."