Crisis Is Over, but Where’s the Fix?

WASHINGTON — When the financial system began to crumble more than three years ago, the world rushed to rescue it. Country after country went deeply into debt to keep banks afloat and prevent a deep recession from turning into something worse. 
It worked. This week was the second anniversary of the nadir of the crisis. Most stock markets around the world are at least 75 percent higher than they were then. Financial stocks, which led the markets down, have also led them up.

At the time, rescuing seemed more important than reforming. The world economy was breaking down because of a lack of financing. Trade flows collapsed, and companies and individuals stopped spending. It seemed clear that halting the slide was critical.
But the world has changed since then. The economic recovery in most developed countries is stuttering at best, and governments are struggling with their own finances. It is time for remorse and second-guessing.
A surprising citadel of that second-guessing is at the International Monetary Fund, where researchers this week concluded that the rescues “only treated the symptoms of the global financial meltdown.”

The researchers, Stijn Claessens and Ceyla Pazarbasioglu, warned that “a rare opportunity is being thrown away to tackle the underlying causes. Without restructuring financial institutions’ balance sheets and their operations, as well as their assets — loans to over-indebted households and enterprises — the economic recovery will suffer, and the seeds will be sown for the next crisis.”
There have been reforms, of course. The Dodd-Frank law in the United States is now being put into effect, albeit by regulators that the new Republican majority in the House of Representatives seems determined to starve of resources to do the job. Banking regulators around the globe have agreed that much more capital is needed by banks, but stricter requirements are coming very slowly out of fear that abrupt changes will reduce bank lending when it is needed the most.
More capital is clearly needed, but it may not be nearly enough. “If we ask them for more capital, and they are too big to fail, they can take even more risk” after they raise additional capital, Y. Venugopal Reddy, a former governor of India’s central bank, argued at an economic conference sponsored by the I.M.F. this week. He added that he was worried about institutions that were “too powerful to regulate.”

One of the questions economists were asked to address at the conference was, Does the financial system have social value?

A few years ago, that question would not have been asked at the International Monetary Fund. If it had been, the responses would have been as unanimous as might be expected if a gathering at the Vatican were to consider whether religion was a good thing.
Now, there is no such unanimity. It is clear that there are functions of the financial system that must be performed, among them the allocation of capital and the setting of prices. But there is at least a suspicion that a significant part of modern finance has no real value for anyone except the participants.

Adair Turner, the chairman of Britain’s Financial Services Authority, spoke with wonderment of the huge volume of stock trades now made by computers using algorithms to rapidly trade in and out. Some traders, he said, were using what they called “predatory algorithms,” whose sole purpose is to exploit a weakness in some other trader’s algorithm and get it to make an unprofitable trade.
“It is quite difficult to work out the social benefit of that,” he said.
And of course, there is also the fact that the financial system did not accomplish what it was supposed to do. “At the core of these functions is the ability to find and set the right price, including the extent to which it reflects risk,” Antonio Borges, an I.M.F. official and former vice chairman of Goldman Sachs International, told the conference. “This is not really a question of financial sophistication, of complex products or greedy bankers. It is a question of getting the prices wrong.”

He added, “It is unbelievable how wrong they were.”
There is general agreement that many of the assumptions economists and others made before the crisis — about the rationality of markets, about their ability to measure risks and about the proper role of monetary policy — were largely wrong, or at best oversimplified. But there is far less unanimity about what to do about it. International cooperation was impressive in dealing with the immediate crisis. Now it is splintering, and banks are threatening to move operations to areas they deem friendlier to them.

In retrospect, it is clear that the bailouts came with too little pain for those responsible. 
Bondholders who financed banks that failed largely escaped pain. That was true even in Ireland, where the bailout would have led to a default of government debt had Europe not stepped in. It is still not clear how Ireland will pay its national debt, but the bank bondholders did fine. 
At the time, of course, there were fears that forcing bondholders to suffer would lead to the collapse of banks that could have survived. Those fears seemed reasonable to me then, and still do. 

But little progress has been made in setting up mechanisms to assure that any future crisis can be dealt with in a different way. There is talk of restructuring bank balance sheets to assure that debt is automatically converted to equity just when equity seems to be worth little, but that is unlikely to happen unless regulators force it, and it is far from clear what price investors would demand. 
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Oil Falls on Demand Worries

NEW YORK (AP) — Energy prices fell Thursday as economists said the recent surge in fuel prices will eventually hurt the fragile economic recovery.

Here's a breakdown of how energy contracts traded Thursday:
On the New York Mercantile Exchange:
Crude: lost $1.68 to settle at $102.70 per barrel;
Gasoline: dropped less than a penny to settle at $3.0196 per gallon;
Heating oil: fell 2.58 cents to settle at $3.0449 per gallon;
Natural gas: gave up 10 cents to settle at $3.83 per 1,000 cubic feet.
On the ICE futures exchange:
Brent crude: lost 51 cents to settle at $115.43 per barrel.
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Renault Affair Goes From Satirical to Farcical to Possible Tragedy

PARIS — The extraordinary charges shook the French business establishment: Renault, the automaker, said in January that three of its employees had been caught trying to sell its electric car secrets overseas. So confident was the company of its case that it fired the three and filed criminal charges. Carlos Ghosn, the chief executive, went on television saying he had seen proof of the men’s guilt.

But the affair appears to have turned from the sensational to the farcical — and now threatens to become a tragedy. Renault is climbing down from its accusations amid doubts about key evidence, creating a possibility that heads will roll amid deep embarrassment in the French establishment.
Like BP, which found its corporate image splattered by the Gulf of Mexico oil spill last year, Renault may soon be looking for new people for its executive suite. Finance Minister Christine Lagarde of France has pointedly called on management to “take all the consequences” in the case.
The investigation is not over yet, and new evidence could still turn up to implicate the men. But Renault no longer talks of certainty. Patrick Pélata, the chief operating officer, on Wednesday told the French daily Le Figaro that “a certain number of factors lead us to doubt” the previous assertions.

At issue is the evidence on which the charges rest: The Swiss and Liechtenstein bank accounts the men were alleged to have created to channel the wages of spying have not been found, even though a secret source had supposedly provided detailed information.
Adding to the mystery, Renault’s own security officials, who — with the aid of a contact in Algeria — carried out the company’s internal investigation after the men were anonymously denounced, have refused to divulge to either French intelligence or the company their source for the account data.

Le Canard Enchaîné, a French satirical weekly, reported Wednesday that the company had paid that source €250,000, or about $345,000, for the initial information, a fact confirmed by the company. Renault said it did not know whom the funds were intended for.
Jean Reinhart, a Renault lawyer, said Wednesday on France Inter radio that he expected the investigation to conclude by the end of March.
Xavier Thouvenin, a lawyer for one of the accused men, said the latest revelations suggested Renault had fallen for a con artist who played on the company’s fears. “Whoever was behind it got a little greedy,” Mr. Thouvenin said. “He went after three guys who didn’t just lie down. They said, ‘We’re going to fight this till the end; we’re innocent.”’

He added: “Now Renault is claiming they’re the victim, but they’re also basically saying they never had any documents, no evidence. They had nothing. Can you imagine firing someone for something like this and not even checking?”
Renault filed a criminal complaint for “organized industrial espionage, corruption, breach of trust, theft and concealment.” At the time, a member of the French Parliament spoke darkly of a “Chinese lead” in the case — drawing a chilly response from Beijing — and called for stronger measures to protect national corporate secrets.

The espionage was supposedly aimed at the company’s electric car program, an area where Renault and its Japanese ally, Nissan Motor, are seeking to establish themselves as the global leader.
But there were signs of problems with the case. To begin with, French government officials, who have a major voice in the company because the state still owns 15 percent of its shares, were furious that Renault had not alerted them or the domestic intelligence service to the case until the automaker had already suspended the three men on Jan. 3. Further, intelligence officials expressed doubt that Renault had the resources at its disposal to investigate in just a few months the complex web of international money transfers through offshore financial centers that it claimed to have discovered.

And all of the men strongly protested their innocence, taking their case to the media and filing defamation suits against the unknown party that had accused them. The three are Michel Balthazard, a member of the management committee and a veteran of more than 30 years with Renault; Bertrand Rochette, Mr. Balthazard’s assistant; and Matthieu Tenenbaum, a former deputy director of the electric car program.

Mr. Pélata, No.2 behind Mr. Ghosn, said during an interview last week with Le Figaro that he would resign if the accusations proved to be false. But Mr. Ghosn’s position could also be in jeopardy. Though he is one of the few chief executives of a French company with worldwide name recognition, he is also among the highest paid, and the French government has not been altogether happy with what it sees as Mr. Ghosn’s emphasis on producing overseas.
Caroline de Gézelle, a company spokeswoman, said neither Mr. Ghosn nor Mr. Pélata were currently available for interviews. “We’re waiting for the prosecutor to conclude his investigation,” she said. “Justice will be done. If indeed these people are innocent, the company could offer them to be reintegrated. It is too soon to say, there are a lot of possibilities that need to be discussed.”

Mr. Tenenbaum said during an interview in January that he wanted nothing more than to return to his job at Renault.
But Mr. Balthazard told Le Figaro this week that the experience had been “horrible.”
“I saw from this affair the total lack of confidence management had in me,” Mr. Balthazard added. “And to go back to a place where people all wrote me off as guilty is simply unimaginable. There’s no going back to Renault.”
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Sheen Files Suit Against Lorre and Warner

Lawyers representing the actor Charlie Sheen escalated the war between the actor and Chuck Lorre, the creator of his hit comedy “Two and a Half Men” and Warner Brothers, the studio that produces it, by filing a suit Thursday demanding more than $100 million in damages for first stopping production on episodes planned for this season and then removing him unjustly from the show.

The suit, which was obtained and posted by the celebrity gossip Web site TMZ, is in response to the decision earlier this week to fire Mr. Sheen from the comedy citing both his behavior, which has included drug use and accusations of violent incidents with women, and his comments about Mr. Lorre and Warner executives.

Mr. Sheen’s chief lawyer, Martin D. Singer, filed the suit Thursday in Superior Court in Los Angeles. In it, he goes on the attack especially against Mr. Lorre, saying the producer first stopped production on the series and then forced Warner Brothers to terminate Mr. Sheen’s employment “to serve his own ego and self-interest.”


Despite the fact that Mr. Lorre himself stood to make many more millions of dollars if the show had completed the eight episodes of the show eliminated when production was halted, the suit claims that the producer refused to write and supervise production on those episodes out of an “egotistical desire to punish Mr. Sheen” and because he had better financial arrangements on two other comedies he produces for Warner Brothers.

The suit labels Mr. Lorre “the proverbial 800-pound gorilla” who could make the studio do anything he wished. Warner Brothers declined comment Thursday afternoon, as did Mr. Lorre.
The action by Mr. Sheen’s legal team ratchets up one of the most fierce legal battles of recent vintage in Hollywood, and comes at the same time Warner Brothers and CBS, the network that broadcasts “Two and a Half Men,” are known to be seriously planning to continue the comedy – the most popular in television – with a new actor replacing Mr. Sheen.

The suit filed Thursday also includes a novel claim of damages on behalf of the entire cast and crew of the series for lost income due to the decision to shut down production this season, even though Mr. Sheen’s lawyers do not represent – at least at the moment – anyone else on the cast or crew.

To counter the claims Warner made earlier this week that Mr. Sheen had breached the terms of his contract with his behavior and comments, the suit cites Warner’s eagerness to sign Mr. Sheen to a new contract in May of 2010 to a deal for two more years on the series even though at the time he was facing both felony and misdemeanor charges.

The suit alleges that it was only after Mr. Sheen began making disparaging remarks about Mr. Lorre (which included an apparently gratuitous reference to Mr. Lorre as “Chaim Levine,” a Hebrew variant of his real name Charles Levine) that any action was taken. Mr. Sheen was “provoked into criticizing Lorre in response to his harassment and disparagement campaign, which had been going on for years” the suit charges.

As evidence of that campaign, the suit included several comments Mr. Lorre included on what he calls “vanity cards” that appear at the end of each episode. Among these were suggestions directed at himself like “Go to an Al-Anon meeting;” one directed at viewers urging them to “avoid degrading yourself by having meaningless sex with strangers in a futile attempt to fill the emptiness of your soul;” and another asking for the audience to pray for people working on the series: “Feel free to pick whomever you think is most in need.”
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Investors Add to US Stock Funds for 2nd Month

BOSTON (AP) — Investors continue to warm up to the stock market.
For the second straight month, investors added more than they withdrew from U.S. stock mutual funds.

Industry consultant Strategic Insight said Thursday that investors deposited a net $15 billion into stock mutual funds in February. That's down from $21 billion in January, the biggest monthly surge into stock funds in seven years.
Yet the second consecutive month of net deposits suggests investor confidence is back, a couple years after the market meltdown ended. Before January, investors withdrew more than they deposited into stock funds for eight consecutive months.

In February, investors continued buying foreign stock funds as well, adding a net $6 billion.
Taxable bond funds attracted $13 billion, while a net $4.5 billion flowed out of tax-free bond funds.
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NJ Private Sector Employment Grew in 2010

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — New Jersey labor officials say the state's employment picture in 2010 was slightly better than initially believed.

Adjusted data released Thursday by the state Department of Labor and Workforce Development indicates that private sector jobs actually grew last year instead of falling, while the decline in public sector employment was overestimated.

Overall, New Jersey gained 5,200 private sector jobs and lost 22,200 public sector jobs from December 2009 to December 2010, or a net loss of 17,000 jobs. Preliminary estimates had indicated a loss of 29,100 public sector jobs, and 1,600 private sector jobs.
The revised data means the state unemployment rate averaged 9.5 percent in 2010. The number trended lower through the year, from a high of 9.8 percent in January to a low of 9.1 percent in 

December.
The state's unemployment rate remained unchanged at 9.1 percent for January, just above the U.S. rate of 9 percent. The rate remained stable even though the state lost 13,000 jobs overall for that month, with decreases reported in both the private and public sectors.

The largest private sector loses were in professional and business service (4,000), manufacturing (1,800) and education and health services (1,400). The only industry sector to post a net increase was trade, transportation and utilities (4,400), with all the job gain in retail trade (6,700).
Public sector employment was lower by 5,900 as losses at the state (3,800) and local government levels (2,600) outpaced a small gain in federal employment (500).
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S.E.C. Head Admits Misstep in Madoff Ethics Issue

WASHINGTON (Reuters) — The chairwoman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, Mary L. SchapiroBernard L. Madoff. , told lawmakers on Thursday that the S.E.C. should have gone beyond what was required under ethics rules after the agency’s top lawyer disclosed that his mother had invested with

Ms. Schapiro discussed the issue before the House Oversight Committee, which is examining whether the agency’s former general counsel, David M. Becker, should have recused himself from advising the S.E.C. on matters related to Mr. Madoff, including how to compensate victims.
Mr. Becker had inherited money from his late mother, who had invested with Mr. Madoff. Becker has told lawmakers he was given the green light to work on Madoff matters from the agency ethics lawyer.

“While Mr. Becker did solicit and follow advice from the ethics counsel, I realize in light of this incident that as chairman I have to ensure that we go beyond what may be required in any particular situation,” Ms. Schapiro said.
Questions about Mr. Becker arose last month after Irving H. Picard, the trustee overseeing the Madoff case, sued him and two of his brothers to recover $1.5 million of the $2 million they had inherited in 2004 from a Madoff investment by their late mother. Mr. Becker’s financial ties to Mr. Madoff had not been publicly disclosed until that suit.

The revelations have raised fresh questions about ethical standards and practices at the agency, where Ms. Schapiro was brought in as chairwoman two years ago with a mandate to strengthen its enforcement unit.

Last Friday, H. David Kotz, the agency’s inspector general, announced that he would investigate the potential conflicts in Mr. Becker’s role as a Madoff recipient who was also the S.E.C.’s general counsel and senior policy director involved in decisions relating to the Ponzi scheme.
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Moody's Warns of Further Irish Mortgage Losses

DUBLIN (Reuters) - Ratings agency Moody's on Thursday downgraded billions of euros worth of Irish residential mortgage backed-securities, citing the country's weak economy and risks associated with its banks. 

Analysts have warned that an increasing number of mortgage defaults could lead to a new wave of losses at Irish banks, several of which collapsed under the weight of bad property development loans.
Moody's said in a statement that it had downgraded the ratings of 50 tranches in 17 prime Irish residential mortgage-backed securities. It said 31.4 billion euros (27 billion pounds) worth of securities had been affected by the review.

Sixteen of the tranches have been downgraded to below investment grade, it said.
It said it expected further deterioration in the performance of Irish pools of residential mortgage loans in the coming months, citing increased levels of negative equity as house prices continue to fall and a lack of credit for refinancing.

"Moody's anticipates further deterioration in the performance of Irish pools of residential mortgage loans," the statement said.
"Lenders will continue to avoid recognizing these losses by offering more loan modifications going forward, reflecting lenders' and regulator's limited appetite to enforce on highly delinquent loans," the statement said.

The proportion of Irish home loans in arrears for more than 90 days rose to 5.7 percent at the end of last year compared with 5.1 percent at the end of September, the central bank said last week.
The bank last year told lenders to wait a year before applying for repossession orders and not to impose extra charges or interest on customers who are cooperating with their banks to deal with their financial difficulties.
Moody's said it had increased its maximum assumed losses on the loans reviewed to 13 percent from 8 percent, but said many of the loans were of below-average quality for the Irish mortgage market.
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LinkedIn Launches Social News Product

MOUNTAIN VIEW, California (Reuters) - LinkedIn, the Internet social network for professionals, launched a service on Thursday that creates a customized online newspaper from articles being shared by the network's more than 90 million members and by users of Twitter

The new service, called LinkedIn Today, displays excerpts of the most popular articles in various industries, in a move that the company hopes will spur users to interact more on its website.
LinkedIn, which filed earlier this year to sell shares to the public, makes money through advertising and by offering premium services. The site is popular resource for job-hunters and for people looking to expand their network of business contacts but has lagged behind social networks like Facebook and Twitter when it comes to user activity on the site.
According to LinkedIn, more than one million messages are shared by members of the network every day.

"There are quite a few of our members who are already doing it," said LinkedIn product head Deep Nishar, about users sharing content on the site. "And there will be more members definitely as a result of seeing the manifestation of what happens when you share and interact with your network."

LinkedIn users will be able to create separate news pages for the various industries they follow, such as the Internet, cleantech and healthcare. Articles will appear in LinkedIn Today based upon how often they have been shared by members of LinkedIn, as well as by members of Twitter, with which LinkedIn has a pre-existing partnership.
LinkedIn declined to say whether the partnership included any financial terms, owing to its pre-IPO quiet period.
The company said the new feature will also be available in an upgrade to its iPhone app that was being released on Thursday.
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Grain Prices Fall on Fewer Supply Worries

Grain prices fell Thursday after a government report eased concerns about shortages later this year.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture predicted that corn and soybean reserves will be higher than initially estimated, forecasting there will be about 123.1 million metric tons of corn left over after this year's harvest. That's up from an estimated 122.5 metric tons in last month's report. There should be about 58.3 million metric tons of soybeans left over, compared with last month's estimate of 58.2 million.
Corn for May delivery dropped 18.25 cents to $6.8275 a bushel. Wheat also fell 18.25 cents to $7.405 a bushel. Soybeans rose 6.5 cents to $13.555 a bushel.
Lower reserves caused global grain prices to double this year. Corn was trading for just $3.50 a bushel as recently as this summer. But growing demand from ethanol producers and consumers in developing countries like China has stripped supplies. The government predicts corn reserves this year will be at their lowest level in 15 years.

The longer-term trend for corn and soybeans will probably be higher, Sanow said, because global demand remains strong. But in the near-term, the recent run-up in prices is likely to ebb.
The government estimates that food prices could rise more than 3 percent this year as processed food makers and grocery stores pass along higher costs for raw ingredients. Still, crops like corn and soybeans account for just 10 percent of the raw ingredients used in processed foods. So it can take months for higher prices to reach consumers.
Oil prices fell Thursday on weak economic news from the U.S. and China, but regained some of their losses on reports from Saudi Arabia that police had fired on demonstrators.
Oil fell as low as $100.62 Thursday morning, the lowest price in a week. The reaction to the Saudi development shows how sensitive the market is to news from the Middle East. Oil prices soared above $100 per barrel last week as an uprising in Libya essentially shut down the country's exports.

Earlier in the day, economists were warning that the recent surge in fuel prices will eventually slow economic growth.
The economic news helped cause the earlier oil sell-off. China, which is expected to drive oil demand for years to come, reported overnight that surging oil and commodity prices produced a surprising trade deficit of $7.3 billion for February. The U.S. Labor Department reported that the number of people seeking unemployment benefits rose far more than analysts had expected last week.

The U.S. dollar also gained against other major currencies. Oil, which is priced in dollars, tends to fall as the dollar rises and makes oil more expensive for buyers holding foreign currency.
Benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude for April delivery lost $1.68 to settle at $102.70 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
In other Nymex trading for April contracts, heating oil fell 2.58 cents to settle at $3.0449 a gallon, gasoline lost 0.76 cents to $3.0196 a gallon and natural gas fell 10 cents to $3.83 per 1,000 cubic feet.

In metals trading, copper for May delivery fell 1.5 cents to settle at $4.1845 per pound.
In April contracts, gold fell $17.10 to settle at $1,412.50 an ounce and platinum gave up $36.40 to $1,765.60 an ounce. May silver lost 98.1 cents to settle at $35.066 an ounce and June palladium fell $15.25 to $766.40 an ounce.
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EU Has Debt Crisis Deja-Vu _ but Stakes Are Raised

BRUSSELS (AP) — Spot the difference:

Economists wonder how Greece will ever pay off its enormous bills. Borrowing costs for Europe's weakest states are at record highs. Credit downgrades come thick and fast while big question marks loom over the health of the region's banks.
And the Germans are blocking any requests for more help.
Spring 2011 in Europe looks eerily like spring 2010 — except that the stakes are now higher and markets' patience appears to be reaching a breaking point.
The continent, especially the 17-nation eurozone, is still struggling to find its way out of a debt crisis that has already pushed Greece and Ireland to take massive bailouts. Investors are looking to the EU for a convincing plan that will keep the crisis from taking down Portugal and much bigger Spain — a scenario that could threaten the future of the common currency.

Europe's leaders have promised such a "comprehensive response" by the end of the month. The grand bargain was supposed to create closer coordination to boost economic growth and completely overhaul the region's bailout fund, its main crisis tool.
But the mounting, uneasy feeling in markets is that the EU will fail to deliver.
"On every single occasion they have overpromised and underdelivered," Sony Kapoor, managing director of the think tank Re-Define, said of Europe's policymakers.
When the eurozone's heads of state and government gather in Brussels Friday for a key stopover ahead of the decisive summit on March 24-25, they will commit to keeping labor costs and public deficits in check to make their economies more competitive and their government finances more sustainable. They will also discuss lowering the interest rates on Ireland's euro67.5 billion ($93 billion) bailout and giving Greece more time to pay back its euro110 billion ($152 billion) rescue loan.

But the measures that markets have been waiting for the most — namely giving the eurozone's euro750 billion ($1 trillion) bailout fund powers that go beyond big national loan packages — already appear to be off the table.
European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso and his Monetary Affairs Chief Olli Rehn set the stakes high in January, when they called on EU leaders to not only boost the size of the fund, but also to widen "the scope of its activity."
That scope, it soon emerged, could include buying the bonds of vulnerable governments to stabilize financial markets, giving countries short-term liquidity lines if they faced huge unexpected costs such as bank bailouts, or even lending governments money to buy back their own bonds and thereby cut down their debts.
The result was a period of relative calm on financial markets, which, policymakers said, should give Europe's leaders the necessary time to rethink their crisis strategy. Until now it has largely been cobbled together in Sunday emergency meetings with the Monday opening of jittery stock markets in mind.

But Barroso and Rehn may have promised too much.
Using the bailout money just to stabilize markets or buy up government bonds is "out of question," a German government official said Thursday. Any help to troubled countries can only come as a last resort and in exchange for strict conditions such as budget cuts and structural reforms, the official told journalists.
About the jitters in financial markets following this week's ratings downgrades of Spanish and Greek debt, the official said "I don't think it can be about reacting to singular events." He declined to be named in line with department policy.

The comments, in many ways, sum up what has happened in the eurozone over the past year.
On the one hand, much has been achieved. Governments bailed out Greece, set up the bailout fund that has since rescued Ireland, and even agreed to change the European Union's treaty to create a permanent rescue mechanism. Record highs for bond yields and ratings downgrades are now received with a certain stoicism.
But on the other hand, the underlying clash of interest — with the haves on the one side and the have-nots on the other — remains.

"In the core countries the electorate is simply not happy to provide more help and funding to the periphery," said Juergen Michels, an economist at Citigroup in London.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel faces an important election in the state of Baden-Wuerttemberg on March 27, just two days after the decisive summit. Elections in Finland, another fiscally strong country in the eurozone, are on April 17.
Together with the Netherlands, those two countries have formed a "coalition of no," that looks set to block any expansion of the bailout fund's powers, said Kapoor.
In some way, finding common ground is even harder now that voters in strong countries feel like they have already put up too much money, while citizens in weak states are reeling from the consequences of steep budget cuts and economic recession.

"The positions are more entrenched than they were last year, so the scope for action (for politicians) was much wider one year ago," said Kapoor.
But most analysts nevertheless think that the euro will survive even if the "comprehensive solution" disappoints. "The lock-in of being part of the eurozone is so strong and the exit costs are so high," said Kapoor.
And what might happen if the "comprehensive solution" fails to convince financial markets on March 25? The same as last year, a hastily called emergency meeting on a Sunday night, said Michels, possibly already on the first weekend of April.
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‘Brought to You By,’ in Short

For several years, advertising awards shows have been starting to sign sponsors to underwrite the general bestowing of honors or, in several instances, present specific awards that are created on behalf of the sponsors. That is also the case for a newcomer in the kudos field, the Shorty Awards, which honor communication on Facebook, Twitter and in other social media.
There will be five sponsors for the third annual Shorty Awards, to be presented on March 28 in New York. They are the Knight Foundation; the Macallan line of Scotch whiskey, sold by the Edrington 

Group; Nokia; PepsiCo; and the Showtime unit of the CBS Corporation.
To promote the coming third season of a Showtime series, “Nurse Jackie,” the Shorty Awards will include a new category, called #Nurse of the Year, to honor actual nurses who produce content in social media. Nominations can be made through a section of the Shorty Web site or by posting comments on Twitter using the hashtag #nurse.
More information can be found in a post on the Shorty Awards blog.

The Knight Foundation, which traces its roots to the family behind what was the Knight newspaper chain, is sponsoring the #Journalist Shorty Award. Macallan is sponsoring an award for real-time photograph of the year, which is tied to a brand campaign centered on photographers.
Nokia is sponsoring the Connecting People Shorty Award. And PepsiCo is sponsoring two honors, the #Green award and the #Innovation award.
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Who'll Pay Bigger Fees for Your Debit Card Use?

WASHINGTON (AP) — Bankers and merchants, pillars of the business world and frequent allies, are embroiled in a bitter lobbying battle over something Americans do 38 billion times a year — swipe their debit cards. Both sides vigorously claim to speak for consumers.
At stake is $16 billion annually that the Federal Reserve says stores pay to banks and credit card companies when customers use the cards — fees the Fed has proposed cutting.
Cut the fees, banks say, and they'll have to abandon free checking and boost other charges to consumers to recover lost revenue. Merchants say lower fees would let them drop their prices, though bankers say they doubt that would happen.

Currently, the fees typically range between 1 and 2 percent of each purchase, averaging 44 cents. The Fed has proposed capping that at 12 cents, though smaller banks could charge more. Bankers want lawmakers to delay the change in hopes that it will eventually be killed or toned down.
Patrick Lewis and Charles Garlock are foot soldiers in this fight's opposing infantries.
Each side is dispatching planeloads of hometown business people like them, along with armies of lobbyists and mountains of letters and e-mails to Washington. Some 4,000 local credit union officers swamped the Capitol last week, and around 300 merchants are buttonholing lawmakers this week. Unless Congress delays the deadline, the Federal Reserve must issue a final rule by April 21, to take effect three months later.
Lewis, a partner in 13 Oasis Stop 'N Go convenience stores in southern Idaho, was visiting Idaho lawmakers on Thursday urging them to back the Fed proposal. He said the $275,000 he pays yearly in debit card fees trails only payroll and his properties' mortgages and rents.

"I don't think her boss is necessarily on our side," he said spending a half hour with an aide to Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho. "But maybe if we provide enough information it will change."
Garlock, president of the Rock Valley Federal Credit Union in Loves Park, Ill., said he would lose $150,000 to $175,000 annually if the Fed's proposed cut in fees is adopted, about one third of his credit union's net annual income.
"The little guys will be hit the worst. I can't sustain it," he said during his lobbying visit last week.
Though bankers are outspending their rivals on lobbying and campaign contributions and seem to have gained momentum, merchants so far have the upper hand. The bankers are trying to get Congress to undo legislation it passed just last year, a tall order on any subject.
Banks and merchants are often allied on such issues as taxes and regulation, but the debit card battle has driven them apart, each accusing the other of trying to pocket unjustified profits in what has become an emotional fight.

"Take a white kitten and put it out, and they will find ways to say how evil it is," Lyle Beckwith, lobbyist for the National Association of Convenience Stores, said of the bankers.
"This is as close to a pitchfork and torch issue as I've seen from our guys," said Jason Kratovil, lobbyist for the Independent Community Bankers Association.
Debit cards are now the most common way besides cash that consumers make purchases, according to the Federal Reserve. Though the transaction takes just a few moments, it is enabled by a vast behind-the-scenes system for preventing fraud and storing data.
When a customer swipes his debit card, he is tapping directly into his bank account to make a purchase. The debit card network, the customer's bank and the merchant's bank quickly exchange information and approve — or disapprove — the transaction, though the actual payment of money can take a day or two.

The battle is being waged with petitions, in newspaper and Internet ads and on the airwaves, too.
A coalition of banks and credit card companies has run a TV spot in Washington, D.C., in which a mom unloading groceries says Congress gave retailers a huge gift by allowing the fee to be curtailed. She asks, "I wonder who's left holding the bag." 
Firing back in one response, Montana retailers have aired a radio ad aimed at Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont., a critic of the rules, accusing him of "standing with Wall Street" against the state's small businesses.

The financial system overhaul law that Congress and President Barack Obama enacted last summer ordered the Federal Reserve to curb the so-called interchange fees but left specifics to the central bank. That subjected the Fed to lobbying that included over 8,000 letters and nearly three dozen meetings with industry officials — mostly from banks and credit card companies.
Since the Fed's public comment deadline passed last month, the focus has shifted to Congress, where foes of the plan are expected to soon introduce legislation to delay it.
Unlike most issues in Congress, the dispute has left Democrats and Republicans divided internally since the industry groups each say its own side would help consumers and the other's would hurt them.
"This is why members hate voting on something like this. There's only downside," said Jaret Seiberg, a policy analyst at the financial firm MF Global.
Measured by sheer financial might, bankers have a clear edge.
Commercial banks, credit unions, and Visa and MasterCard — who run the biggest debit card networks — spent a combined $75 million lobbying on all issues in Washington last year, nearly double the retail industry's $40 million, according to the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics, which tracks such spending. The American Bankers Association, JPMorgan Chase, CVS Caremark Corp. and Wal-Mart Stores Inc. are among the biggest spenders.
Overall, financial firms outspent the merchants by about the same margin on contributions to candidates during the 2009-2010 congressional campaign, $12 million to $6 million.
Yet the bankers face the steeper climb. Not only are they trying to get Congress to reverse itself, they still bear ill will from their part in the nation's financial crisis and the bailouts that followed.

"To pass something you have to clear quite a few hurdles," said Doug Kantor, an attorney for the Merchants Payments Coalition, representing retailers. "It only takes missing one of those hurdles to derail an effort."
Even should the bankers prevail in the GOP-run House, they'd still have to contend with Sen. Richard Durbin, D-Ill. He got the changes included in the financial overhaul bill on a 64-33 vote and remains a tenacious advocate of the lower fees.
Should a new vote occur, Durbin is sure to use Senate procedures that would let him win with just 41 of the Senate's 100 votes. His job as the Senate's No. 2 Democratic leader means Democratic senators considering reversing their vote from last year would have to think twice.
"We face a challenge in this area, but we continue to push," said Ken Clayton, the American Banking Association's chief counsel.

The bankers have made progress.
Six senators who backed Durbin last year are no longer in Congress. And Sens. Kay Hagan, D-N.C., Michael Bennet, D-Colo., and Mike Crapo, R-Idaho — who all backed Durbin last year — have expressed worries that an exemption the Fed proposed letting smaller banks continue charging higher fees will not work. Members of both parties on the House Financial Services Committee and Senate Banking Committee have also voiced concern.
Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has given the banks more ammunition. He has told lawmakers that the exemption for smaller banks might not work and said uncertainty over that and other issues — such as whether to include banks' costs for covering debit card fraud in setting the fee — means the Fed might not complete the rule by April 21.
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Credit Suisse Communications Executive Departs

Cristina von Bargen, Credit Suisse’s longtime communications chief for the company’s investment bank and the Americas, is leaving the firm, according to an internal memo obtained by DealBook.
The move comes just a year or so after the firm hired Pamela Thomas-Graham to oversee all communications for the firm. Ms. Thomas-Graham is the firm’s “chief talent, branding and communications officer” and oversees human resources, corporate communications, corporate branding and advertising. 

Ms. Thomas-Graham is looking to install a new United States communications chief, which led to this shakeup, according to people close to the firm who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about the matter.
Charles Naylor, a firm spokesman, said Credit Suisse wished Ms. von Bargen the best in her future endeavors. He said Credit Suisse was looking for a replacement for Ms. von Bargen and hopes to have someone in place by the fall of 2011.

Ms. von Bargen is a well-known figure in Wall Street public relations circles. She joined Credit Suisse in 1998 from Salomon Brothers.
At Credit Suisse she advised a number of top executives and helped guide the firm through the technology boom and bust.

A copy of the memo is below:
Cristina von Bargen, Head of Corporate Communications for the Investment Bank and for the Americas Region, will be leaving Credit Suisse in May. Cristina will support Charles Naylor and the Corporate Communications team until her replacement is announced.
Cristina joined Credit Suisse in 1998 from Salomon Smith Barney. Over the past 12 years, Cristina developed and led the Investment Bank’s global communications function, a team that now encompasses internal and executive communications, media relations, marketing, advertising and sponsorship. In 2005, Cristina’s role expanded to include management of communications in the Americas region for Private Banking and Asset Management in addition to Investment Banking.

Cristina and her global team have guided the Investment Bank’s internal and external communications effort for more than a decade. Her good judgment has served Credit Suisse through leadership changes, major acquisitions, regulatory issues and the One Bank integration. Most recently, Cristina and her team effectively positioned the Investment Bank as one of the strongest players to emerge from the global financial crisis, promoting our market share gains and helping Credit Suisse sweep several best-in-class industry awards. A strategic communications advisor to the Investment Bank and Credit Suisse senior management and a well-respected leader, Cristina’s professionalism, collegiality and wise counsel will be missed.
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Beyond Facebook, SecondMarket Opens Its Doors to Thousands

The marketplace for private Internet companies is about to get a bit more crowded.
SecondMarket, an exchange for alternative investments, will introduce a new trading platform on Friday that will integrate social media and significantly expand its universe of private companies.
The company, based in Manhattan, is already one of the largest marketplaces for private stock. It will add about 12,000 new companies to its exchange— a twentyfold increase from its current pool.
“This is very much based on demand,” said Barry E. Silbert, the founder and chief executive of SecondMarket. “This new platform is the next step in the evolution and the development of the private market and alternative investing.”

The company’s move comes amid surging interest in private Internet start-ups, which has become a boon for businesses like SecondMarket that match buyers and sellers.
The seven-year-old business is a major player in this market. Last year, SecondMarket oversaw $400 million in trades in 40 private companies, according to Mr. Silbert.
In its updated platform, the company is aiming to broaden its base and make its community more social. For the users, qualified investors can now choose to follow companies and friends on the exchange and receive updates on their investments and auctions.
Unlike more traditional social networks, like Twitter, the platform does not support direct messaging and there are high privacy walls. Both users have to agree on a connection and only qualified investors can follow a company’s feed.

SecondMarket is shoring up its inventory, just as the market for private shares is heating up. Although the market for initial public offerings has started to show signs of life, during the downturn many Internet start-ups opted to stay private because of tighter regulations and the weakened economy. With several large Web companies, like Zynga and Groupon, on the sidelines, many investors and employees sought alternative markets to cash out, giving rise to exchanges like 

SecondMarket.
 In the last year, trading has become more frenzied, amid growing interest for elite Web companies. Beyond SecondMarket’s competitors, like Nyppex and SharesPost, Wall Street firms have also created investment vehicles to buy shares in these companies.
At the center of the action is Facebook, the sprawling social network that made up 40 percent of SecondMarket’s trades last year. A block of Facebook shares recently sold for $30 a share on SecondMarket at a valuation near $75 billion (a 50 percent markup over Goldman Sach’s January investment in Facebook).

The flurry of activity can be a headache for the start-ups, which have to track these trades and make sure that their total shareholder count does not hit 500, which would require them to file financial results or go public.
The exuberance has already drawn the scrutiny of regulators, who started looking into the trades of social networking companies like Facebook, Twitter, Zynga and LinkedIn late last year, as was first reported by DealBook.
SecondMarket has acknowledged that it has received information requests from the Securities and Exchange Commission on pooled investment vehicles and is cooperating with regulators.
In its new trading platform, Mr. Silbert said he hoped to create a more transparent structure for the market.

Before any shares are traded, SecondMarket says it will contact every company for approval. The company will also give businesses the power to define the parameters for its trades.
For example, a company can determine the type of investors that are eligible and the structure of the auction process. For investors, SecondMarket will aggregate publicly available data, including filings, on business pages and encourage companies to submit additional financial information.
As SecondMarket expands, there is concern that it is helping to fuel an already overheated market and opening the doors to less viable business. Although Zynga, Facebook and Groupon are churning out significant annual revenue, it’s unlikely that the 12,000 businesses in 
SecondMarket’s expanded universe (the majority of which are technology companies) can boast the same. SecondMarket’s investors must be accredited — meaning they have at least $1 million in assets or an annual salary $200,000 — but Peter Falvey, a managing director at Morgan Keegan, said there’s still not enough information available to help them make prudent decisions.
“It’s hard enough to get information on Facebook,” he said. “I’m an accredited, I have an M.B.A. in finance, how do I know what these things should be valued at?”
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China's Cyber Abilities Worry U.S.: Spy Chief

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - China's growing capabilities in cyber-warfare and intelligence gathering are a "formidable concern" to the United States, the top intelligence official told a Senate panel on Thursday. 

 "The Chinese have made a substantial investment in this area, they have a very large organization devoted to it and they're pretty aggressive," Director of National Intelligence James Clapper told the Senate Armed Services Committee.

"This is just another way in which they glean information about us and collect on us for technology purposes, so it's a very formidable concern," he said.
Clapper, addressing questions at an annual hearing on worldwide security threats, did not elaborate on Chinese cyber activities.
But in his written testimony, the intelligence chief said 2010 saw a "dramatic increase in malicious cyber-activity targeting U.S. computers and networks." The passage did not specifically mention China.

Clapper also cited an April 8, 2010, incident in which state-owned China Telecom advertised erroneous network routes that instructed "massive volumes" of U.S. and other foreign Internet traffic to go through Chinese servers for 17 minutes.
 "This incident affected traffic to and from U.S. government and military sites, including sites for the Senate, the Army, the Navy, the Marine corps, the air force, and the office of the Secretary of Defense, as well as a number of Fortune 500 firms," he said.

When that incident was revealed in late 2010, China Telecom denied that it hijacked U.S. Internet traffic. China's standard response to cyber-attack allegations has been to deny any connection to them and say it is also a victim of such attacks.
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How Debit Card Networks Pay for Transactions

How debit cards work:
Customer making a purchase swipes his card at checkout counter.
Information about the customer and purchase is transmitted over a network to the merchant's bank.
The information is then sent to the customer's bank. It verifies the customer's account, checks for stolen or lost cards, and determines whether the customer has enough money in his account to cover the purchase.

The customer's bank then sends a message back either authorizing or denying the transaction.
Meanwhile, the merchant's bank collects a fee from the merchant, which is included in the price of the item. The merchant's bank pays an interchange fee to the customer's bank and a smaller fee to the network for its service, and keeps a fee for itself. The customer's bank also pays a fee to the network. 

Other fees are possible.
Actual payment for the item, made by the customer's bank to the merchant's bank, usually occurs by the end of the business day, often instantaneously. The payment of fees varies — it can occur immediately, at the end of the day or later.
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Source: Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, "A Guide to the ATM and Debit Card Industry," published in 2003, with additional information from financial and retail industry officials.
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Bank of England Holds Fire on Rates

LONDON (Reuters) - The Bank of England kept interest rates at a record low on Thursday, reluctant to jeopardize a fragile economic recovery and hopeful the recent surge in inflation will prove temporary. 


All but one of the 63 economists polled by Reuters last week had predicted rates would stay at 0.5 percent. However, with inflation double the central bank's 2 percent target and still rising, most expect a rate rise later this year.
Money markets show a 70 percent chance the BoE will raise rates by a quarter percentage point in May and are fully pricing such a move by the middle of the year.
The European Central Bank, dealing with an inflation rate nearly half the level of Britain's, has already signaled that an interest rate rise in imminent.

Three of Britain's nine-strong Monetary Policy Committee voted to raise interest rates in February, so it would only take two to switch camps to get a majority in favor of higher rates. The bank gives no statement on its reasons when it keeps rates on hold and minutes from the meeting -- including how the committee voted -- will not be published until later this month.
"With the committee expected to begin tightening over the coming months, and a hike requiring the support of just two more members, UK markets look set to remain jittery," said Philip Shaw, an economist at Investec.
RECOVERY HEADWINDS
The main argument keeping the BoE on hold is the weakness of Britain's recovery and the fear that the government's austerity drive will throw up stiff headwinds over the coming year.
Unlike its main trading partners, Britain's economy lurched into reverse at the end of 2010, contracting by 0.6 percent in the fourth quarter.
While the country's manufacturing sector is enjoying a strong rebound, the services sector, which accounts for three-quarters of the economy, is struggling.
Home Retail, Britain's biggest household goods retailer, delivered a profit warning on Thursday, raising fears of a major downturn in consumer spending.
The government announced the biggest public spending cuts in a generation shortly after being elected last year, but much of the pain from these measures will not kick in until April, the start of the new fiscal year.
"The majority of MPC members likely decided that higher interest rates were an extra handicap that the economy could do without for now at least," said Howard Archer at Global Insight.
"The key question is will this prove to be a temporary reprieve on interest rates or will the Bank of England hold fire for some time to come?"

MAY HIKE?
Most investors believe the BoE will want to see how the economy fared in the first quarter of this year before acting. This means a rate rise is unlikely to come before May.
There remains a good deal of uncertainty however. Tensions in north Africa and the Middle East have pushed up oil prices, driving up inflation but also weighing on global growth.
"The Monetary Policy Committee remains caught on the horns of a dilemma," said Robert Gardner, chief economist at the Nationwide Building Society.
"Growth is still disappointingly weak, while inflation is already twice the target level and likely to head higher, with oil above $100 a barrel and January's VAT hike still filtering through."

UK interest rates have stood at 0.5 percent since March 2009 when the BoE slashed rates to an all-time low and embarked on an unprecedented program of quantitative easing.
However, divisions on the monetary policy committee have deepened in recent months and the replacement of arch-hawk Andrew Sentance with Goldman Sachs' economist Ben Broadbent in 

June adds to uncertainty.
Minutes to this week's BoE policy meeting will be published on March 23, the same day as the government's Budget, and will be closely scrutinized.
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U.S. Trade Deficit Rose 15% in January on Higher Oil Prices

A surge in oil prices helped push imports up at the fastest pace in 18 years in January, giving the country the largest trade deficit in six months.
The Commerce Department said Thursday that the January deficit increased 15.1 percent to $46.3 billion. Exports rose 2.7 percent to a high of $167.7 billion. But imports rose at a 5.2 percent pace, to $214.1 billion. That reflected a big jump in America’s oil bill, underscoring concerns that surging oil prices could slow the recovery.
A widening trade deficit hurts the United States economy. When imports outpace exports, more jobs go to foreign workers than to American workers.

The politically sensitive deficit with China rose 12.5 percent to $23.5 billion in January, the largest with any country. Last year, the deficit with China rose to a record $273.1 billion, increasing political pressure in this country to take a tougher line on what critics see as China’s unfair trading practices, like manipulating its currency to gain trade advantages.

China, which typically runs huge trade surpluses with the rest of the world, reported a surprise deficit of $7.3 billion for February as surging prices for oil and other commodities pushed imports up 19.4 percent while its exports dropped 2.4 percent.
The export decline reflected the fact that Chinese businesses were idled for the weeklong Lunar New Year holiday. Analysts said the rare trade deficit for China was likely to be temporary.
The overall American deficit in January would translate into an annual deficit of $556.1 billion. Last year’s imbalance was $495.7 billion, which was 32.8 percent higher than in 2009 when a deep recession in this country had shrunk America’s appetite for foreign goods.

Economists expect that this year’s deficit will be essentially unchanged from 2010 as rising imports, reflecting a growing American economy, are matched by continued strong export sales. However, they caution that this forecast could turn out to be too optimistic if oil prices, which have surged on political turmoil in Libya and other countries in the region, keep climbing.
For January, America’s oil bill jumped 9.5 percent to $34.9 billion, the highest level since October 2008, reflecting a $4.56 per barrel increase in the average price of imported crude oil, which rose to $84.34. In recent weeks, oil has been trading above $100 per barrel so oil imports will likely be even higher in the February and March trade reports.
President Obama has set a goal of doubling United States exports by 2015. The administration is taking a tougher stance in trade disputes with China, including applying more pressure to get China to allow its currency to rise in value against the dollar.

On Wednesday, Mr. Obama sought to highlight the importance of the American-China relationship by nominating the commerce secretary, Gary F. Locke, to be ambassador to China. Mr. Locke would be the first Chinese-American to serve in that post.
The rise in American exports pushed them to a record high, surpassing the old mark of $165.7 billion set in July 2008 before a financial crisis in the United States pushed the global economy into a deep recession. The export strength in January reflected strong sales of United States autos, industrial machinery, medical equipment and farm products including wheat.
America’s deficit with Canada edged down 4.9 percent to $3.7 billion while the imbalance with the European Union dropped 15.3 percent to $5.6 billion. The deficit with Japan fell 15.6 percent to $5 billion.
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Moelis Hires Co-Head of Skadden Buyouts Team

os Angeles, March 10, 2011: Moelis & Company today announced that Nick P. Saggese has joined the firm as a Senior Advisor based in Los Angeles. Mr. Saggese, who has a distinguished legal career spanning more than 30 years, will work closely with the firm's advisory professionals to broaden client relationships and provide senior level advice and expertise to the firm and its clients.

"Nick is one of the most talented and respected corporate attorneys and we could not be more pleased that he has joined us to provide his unique insights and expertise to our clients," said Ken Moelis, Chief Executive Officer of Moelis & Company. "Over the course of his career, Nick has been a leading advisor on mergers and acquisitions, a pioneer in complex capital markets transactions and a first call for many corporations and financial sponsors. Our clients will be very well served by having someone of his reputation and caliber available to them for strategic advice."


Mr. Saggese joins Moelis & Company following a more than 25-year career with Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP where he most recently was a Partner and served as the Co-Head of the firm's Private Equity practice. In this role, he represented clients in connection with a variety of corporate transactions, including private equity, mergers and acquisitions, recapitalizations, securities offerings and corporate restructurings. Recent representative transactions include advising Vulcan in the sale of DreamWorks to Paramount Pictures, Leonard Green and TPG on the acquisition of PETCO, MGM on its Chapter 11 reorganization and Paul Allen, as principal shareholder of Charter Communications, in connection with Charter's Chapter 11 reorganization. Mr. Saggese is a co-author of one of the leading handbooks regarding corporate restructurings. He has also been recognized as a top lawyer in each of capital markets, mergers and acquisitions and private equity in a number of legal and business journals and was recently named one of the Top 100 Lawyers in California by the
Daily Journal.

Mr. Saggese said: "I have worked with Ken and the Moelis & Company team for many years and am delighted to join such a world-class and experienced group of people. Moelis & Company has demonstrated tremendous momentum and a unique focus on clients, and I look forward to assisting the team in providing advice and solutions to clients."


About Moelis & Company

Moelis & Company, recently named Best Global Independent Investment Bank by Euromoney, is a global investment bank that provides financial advisory, capital raising and asset management services to a broad client base including corporations, institutions and governments. With over 470 employees, Moelis & Company serves its clients through offices in New York, Boston, Chicago, Dubai, London, Los Angeles and Sydney.
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