Tuesday, February 12, 2008

JD Group: More cases pending

(Fin24) - The Financial Services Providers' ombud is investigating eight other cases pertaining to the lending practices of furniture retailer JD Group.


This follows a ruling by FSP obmud Charles Pillai, which found that JD Group subsidiary Barnetts had circumvented the FAIS Act.


The company was ordered to pay back charges, interest on those charges and case fees to a customer who had bought a television and stove on credit, after Pillai found the customer - Ntiya Thuliswe Gumede, a domestic worker earning R300 a week - had not been made aware of the terms and conditions of the sale of a stove and television she had bought at Barnetts' Port Shepstone branch.


David Davidson at the ombud's office says they had eight cases relating to JD Group, prior to the determination being made public.


Davidson says that the cases are still to be investigated, first to determine whether they fall within their jurisdiction and also whether they any grounds.


The complaints relate to dealings with, among others: JD group businesses Bradlows, Hi-Fi Corporation, Russells, and Price n Pride, as well as Ellerines, Lewis, The Furniture Shop and OK Furniture.
 
 

Vodafone still after Vodacom?

(Fin24) - Any notion that Vodafone will give in to Telkom's rejection of its offer for a controlling stake in Vodacom (the duo's joint cellular business) has been dismissed - at least given Vodafone CE Arun Sarin's declaration that Africa and Asia were firmly on Vodafone's growth radar screen.


In a carefully crafted speech steering clear of the company's intention to up its control of Vodacom, Sarin - addressing a large audience at the 3GSM Mobile Word Conference in Barcelona, Spain - said South Africa and India were two countries in emerging markets critical to Vodafone's growth strategy.


"Last year we recorded 15% growth in our South African-based business," said Sarin, adding that with most markets across Europe reaching saturation South Africa and India were critical to the company's growth plans.


In India - a market in which Vodafone made its foray after acquiring a controlling stake in Bharti Telecoms - the company had signed up nearly 1.5m subscribers.


"Our target in that particular market is to sign up close to 300m subscribers over the next three years," said Sarin.


Asked by Fin24 to state weather Vodafone would return for Vodacom with a revised offer, Sarin declined to answer before quickly making a dash to the exit door of a packed auditorium with a horde of Vodacom executives in tow.
 
 

Miller Says Microsoft Needs to Enhance Yahoo Offer

(Bloomberg) -- Legg Mason Inc. fund manager Bill Miller, the second-biggest shareholder of Yahoo! Inc., said Microsoft Corp. will need to raise its $44.6 billion offer to buy the Internet company.

``We think Microsoft will need to enhance its offer if it wants to complete a deal,'' Miller, 58, wrote in a Feb. 10 letter to shareholders released today by the Baltimore-based company.

Miller heads Legg Mason Capital Management, which owned about 80 million shares, or 6 percent, of Yahoo on Sept. 30, Bloomberg data show. Microsoft, the biggest software maker, on Jan. 31 bid $31-per-share to buy Yahoo, 62 percent more than the closing price the day before the offer. Yahoo yesterday rejected the bid, saying it ``substantially undervalues'' the company.

``We think this deal is a strategic imperative for Microsoft, and that Yahoo is in a tough spot if it wishes to remain independent,'' Miller wrote. ``It will be hard for Yahoo to come up with alternatives that deliver more value than Microsoft will ultimately be willing to pay.''

Microsoft, based in Redmond, Washington, responded yesterday to the Yahoo board's rejection with a statement calling its offer a ``full and fair proposal.'' The company didn't disclose its next steps and said it is ``moving forward'' with its $31-a-share bid for Sunnyvale, California-based Yahoo.

Miller said Legg Mason's own calculations put Yahoo's value in the range of $40 or more per share.

Countrywide Deal

Miller, whose subsidiary is the biggest holder of Countrywide Financial Corp., said in the letter released today that he hasn't decided to back the bid by Bank of America Corp. to buy the largest U.S. home lender.

The offer has ``truncated'' any gains in Countrywide's shares, Miller said. Bank of America, based in Charlotte, North Carolina, on Jan. 11 agreed to buy Countrywide after the stock lost 85 percent of its value in a year. The bank's takeover bid equates to less than $8 a share for Calabasas, California-based Countrywide.
 

TPG Seeks More Than $15 Billion for Buyout Fund, Investors Say

(Bloomberg) -- TPG Inc., the private-equity firm that last year bought TXU Corp. in the largest U.S. leveraged buyout, is seeking more than $15 billion for a new fund, according to potential investors.

The investment committee of Washington state's pension fund, which met with TPG co-founder David Bonderman Feb. 7, will recommend a $750 million commitment, said Liz Mendizabal, a spokeswoman in Olympia. Bonderman is set to discuss the fund, called TPG VI, with the Oregon Investment Council Feb. 27.

TPG, based in Fort Worth, Texas, is putting together the fund even as deal-making is stalled after a doubling of financing costs in the second half of 2007. Endowments and pension funds, seeking returns that top stocks and bonds, are increasing their investments with private-equity firms, whose assets may reach $5 trillion by 2012, according to research firm Private Equity Intelligence Ltd. in London.

``The public markets are down or soft and there's no other game,'' said Lyons Brewer, a managing director of C.P. Eaton Partners LLC, a Rowayton, Connecticut-based firm that helps buyout firms and hedge funds raise money.

Funds raised a record $502 billion last year, according to Private Equity Intelligence, including $21.7 billion by New York-based Blackstone Group LP, the industry's biggest pool.

TPG Partners IV, the $5.3 billion fund the firm started in 2003, has since returned an average of almost 36 percent a year to investors, according to data on the Web site of the California Public Employees' Retirement System.
 
Read more at Bloomberg

GM Posts Loss on North America; Overseas Profit Rises

(Bloomberg) -- General Motors Corp., the world's largest automaker, posted a fourth-quarter loss on shrinking sales in North America while revenue overseas rose.

The shares gained as much as 2.6 percent in New York trading as the Detroit-based company recorded a profit after excluding one-time costs. GM's net loss of $722 million followed year- earlier net income of $950 million.

The results indicate Chief Executive Officer Rick Wagoner is delivering on his pledge to rely more on overseas sales while cutting expenses at home. Wagoner said he will offer buyouts to speed the hiring of lower-paid new workers in the U.S., where industrywide sales are projected to fall to a 10-year low this year.

``Wagoner is doing the right things; he's just doing them at a time when the economy might be masking some of the favorable benefits from his actions,'' said Pete Hastings, a fixed-income analyst at Morgan Keegan & Co. in Memphis, Tennessee. Buyouts for 74,000 United Auto Workers members would be ``money well spent,'' he said.

The quarterly per-share loss was $1.28, versus the year- earlier profit of $1.68. Automotive revenue rose 7 percent to $46.7 billion, GM said in a statement today.

Not counting costs and gains the company considers one-time, GM reported an adjusted profit of $64 million, or 8 cents a share. On that basis, analysts estimated a loss of 64 cents. In North America, GM lost $1.1 billion, excluding some costs. By that measure, analysts predicted a loss of $400 million.

Shares Rise

GM rose 46 cents to $27.58 at 11:34 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading after reaching $27.83 earlier. Through yesterday, the shares had advanced 9 percent this year, the most in the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

The adjusted profit stemmed mostly from a $1.6 billion tax benefit, Chief Financial Officer Fritz Henderson said. The tax gain stems from the sale of the Allison transmission unit and a $7.7 billion reduction in GM's overall pension and retiree health-care liabilities, he said.

``It was a tough quarter in North America,'' Henderson told reporters today in Detroit. ``Volumes were down, and there was tougher pricing because we had a full incentive load for our pickups.''

2007 Loss

The full-year deficit was a record $38.7 billion and included a $39 billion expense in the third quarter related to a tax-accounting change. In 2006, GM lost $1.98 billion, or $3.50 a share.

The third quarter included the $1.6 billion tax benefit and $768 million in one-time expenses.

GM had $27.3 billion in cash, readily available assets and funds from a retirement fund at the end of December, a decline from $30 billion at the end of September. The automaker ended 2007 with a negative adjusted automotive cash flow of $2.4 billion, a $2 billion improvement from 2006.

Outside the U.S., GM had a $424 million profit in the Latin America/Africa/Middle East region and a $72 million Asia-Pacific profit. Europe reported a fourth-quarter deficit of $445 million.

The automaker today also announced details of a buyout plan for its remaining 74,000 UAW employees in the U.S. The offers would provide payments of as much as $62,500 for the most-skilled workers with at least 30 years service.