Archive for June 25th, 2009

25
Jun

US Central Bank Chief Defends Bank Bailout

Ben Bernanke testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, 25 Jun 2009, before House Oversight and Government Reform Committee hearing The chief of the U.S. central bank is defending his actions in the multi-billion dollar bailout of one of the nation’s largest banks. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told a government oversight committee, the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, Wednesday the Fed acted “with the highest integrity” during a merger between the private Bank of America and failing investment bank Merrill Lynch.Critics say Bernanke and former U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson told Bank of America its top officials would be fired if they failed to go ahead with the deal. Others, including the oversight committee’s ranking opposition member, Republican Representative Darrell Issa, accuse them of taking part in a government “cover-up.” Bernanke repeatedly denied both allegations, saying the Fed only acted to prevent the financial crisis from spreading.The deal, late last year, was part of Washington’s effort to rescue the troubled financial system.  The political controversy comes as President Barack Obama is proposing to give the Federal Reserve more power as part of a plan to reform the country’s financial system.Some lawmakers say the U.S. central bank already has too much power.Bank of America Chief Executive Kenneth Lewis testified earlier this month he was told he and other top executives would lose their jobs if they tried to back out of the deal.Oversight committee chairman, Representative Edolphus Towns, a Democrat from New York, said much of what happened during the financial crisis “remains shrouded in secrecy.”Bank of America received $45 billion in emergency loans from the U.S. government. Almost half of the emergency aid was tied to the takeover of Merrill Lynch.Lawmakers have also accused federal regulators, including the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department, and Bank of America executives of withholding information about the merger from investors.Some information for this report was provided by AP. 

US Central Bank Chief Defends Bank Bailout

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25
Jun

Kohlberg Hopes to Be Listed on Exchange in Amsterdam

Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, the private equity firm, said Wednesday that it was officially postponing a listing on the New York Stock Exchange, instead seeking to revise a merger with a publicly traded European affiliate that would give it an Amsterdam listing.

It is the latest twist for Kohlberg Kravis, which first sought an initial public offering nearly two years ago after similar moves by rivals. But the credit markets froze soon afterward, dimming considerably the attractions of being publicly traded.

Last summer, Kohlberg Kravis proposed buying out KKR Private Equity Investors, which trades in Amsterdam and invests in or alongside the private equity firm’s funds. Acquiring KKR Private Equity Investors, in which the buyout firm already held a 12 percent stake, was seen as a way to gain a public listing more quickly than through an initial offering. But the shockwaves of the financial crisis made it difficult for Kohlberg Kravis to go public.

Now, Kohlberg Kravis is seeking to revise the deal once more. Under the terms of the new proposal, the two firms would combine their entities, with Kohlberg Kravis holding 70 percent of the combined business and the private equity investors holding 30 percent. (The original plan would have given investors 21 percent at the outset and securities known as contingent value interests that could give them up to 27 percent.)

Kohlberg executives would reap about 40 percent of the combined business’ carried interest, which has long been the bulk of profits of private equity firms.

The combined business would remain listed on the Euronext Amsterdam exchange, but could transfer its listing to the N.Y.S.E., also owned by NYSE Euronext.

On Wednesday, K.K.R. said that it has already secured the consent of investors holding about 44 percent of KKR Private Equity Investors. The firm cautioned, however, that it had not yet secured the consent of its independent directors.

Kohlberg Hopes to Be Listed on Exchange in Amsterdam

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