News and Analysis

Brazos Private Equity Partners has invested an undisclosed amount in Flint Trading Inc., a Thomasville, N.C.-based maker of preformed thermoplastic road and safety markings.
Exopack Holding Corp., a packaging platform sponsored by Sun Capital Partners, has agreed to buy the Menasha, Wis. and Tulsa facilities of Bemis Co. (NYSE: BMS). The deal is valued at $81 million in cash.
CHICAGO/NEW YORK (Reuters) – CBOE Holdings Inc. (CBOE.O), North America’s last major unlisted financial exchange, priced shares in its initial public offering at the top of the expected range on Monday, signaling investor demand in what has been a rocky market for new U.S. issues. The Chicago Board Options Exchange sold 11.7 million shares for […]
NEW DELHI (Reuters) – Reliance Communications’ (RLCM.BO) plan to open up its telecoms tower unit to investors signals the ammunition India’s No. 2 mobile operator can tap as it aims to cut its huge debt in a fiercely competitive market. Carriers in India’s cut-throat cellular sector, also the world’s fastest-growing – with more than 600 […]
(Reuters) – Telecom and media tycoon Richard Li’s private equity fund may lose control of a debt-laden Bulgarian telecommunications operator as junior lenders are battling to take it over, a newspaper reported on Tuesday. Vivacom, Bulgaria’s biggest fixed-line operator, was set to breach agreements on its 1.64 billion euros ($2 billion) in loans by the […]
LONDON (Reuters) – Buyout company Cinven said Britain’s Spice Plc (SPI.L) had rejected a takeover bid that values the provider of engineering and support services to utility companies at almost 200 million pounds ($309.3 million). Prompted by a 7 percent climb in Spice shares on Monday, Cinven issued a statement saying that it had proposed […]
The Newsweek auction has taken a turn toward the fanciful. The weekly magazine, which was put up for sale last month by The Washington Post Co., is seeking bids of between $15 million and $20 million, according to a banking source said. The relatively high price tag comes despite the fact that Newsweek does not have EBITDA. “No, I don’t think they will get it,” the source said. Is this a wild swing for the fences? Is it just a trial balloon? Maybe a bit of both, since a buyside source said he hadn't heard the $20 million figure (no comment on the $15m).
BP Gets Scared: BP has hired Goldman Sachs, Credit Suisse and the Blackstone Group to to advise on its options as it faces financial and political pressure over the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. Who would buy them? Free WiFi with your latte: Starbucks said it will provide free WiFi in all its stores beginning on July 1. Hooray! Embezzling for that perfect fern: Scott Welch allegedly stole $11.2 million from Wachovia and use the money to landscape. This is not a joke. Another blow to books: News Corp. inks a deal to buy Skiff, the e-reader company backed by the Hearst Corporation.
TowerBrook Capital Partners has retained Thomas Flocco to explore investment opportunities in the consumer goods space. He is the former CEO of Beam Global Spirits & Wine, and a former partner at McKinsey & Company.
Wendy’s may not have enough beef for private equity. Last Friday, Nelson Peltz, the billionaire investor who owns 23% of the restaurant chain and its sister beef-slinger Arby's, disclosed that an “unnamed third party” had expressed interest in partnering on a potential acquisition. The admission caused Wendy’s shares to pop more than 7 percent. Rumors are circulating that the mystery suitor is THL Partners, is back for fast-food redemption. If case you’d forgotten, the buyout firm had a deal in February to buy CKE Restaurants, which operates Carl’s Jr. and Hardee’s restaurants, for $11.05 a share, or about $619 million. But then Apollo Management swooped in with a higher offer of $12.55 a shares, or $694 million, to seal the deal. On Monday, any hope of a THL-Peltz combined bid got deflated, as the New York Post said Peltz just isn’t interested in partnering with any third party. Peltz, the story said, could take the company private and restructure troubled Arby’s away from the glare of public speculation. Then, Peltz could return Wendy’s to the public markets (maybe with Arby's, if it's running leaner).
pehub
pehub

Copyright PEI Media

Not for publication, email or dissemination