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Archive: April, 2009

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Thursday, April 30, 2009
Ex-GE boss Jack Welch, in town yesterday to help promote wife Suzy's self-help book, 10-10-10, told me it's been bittersweet catching up with NBC local-television executives at stations like Channel 10 in Philadelphia. "These people used to work for me," said Welch, who bought NBC for GE. "They're really hurting. Local advertising has gone away." As a group, "they're in worse shape than newspapers."

Speaking of newspapers... Didn't Welch and a group of fellow wealthy Bostonians try to buy the Boston Globe a couple of years back? "We came close to buying the Red Sox, we figured would throw in the newspaper," Welch told me. New York Times Co. owns both the Globe and a stake in the Sox. 
 
At the time, says Welch, "we figured the Globe was worth $50 million -- now it's probably negative $50 million -- and the (Times' Red Sox stake) about $175 million -- now it would be $250 million." But Times Co. "didn't want to talk," Welch added. "They told us it was a 'strategic property.'" The Times put its Sox stake on the block in January, and it's threatened to shut the money-losing Globe. 
 
Posted by Joseph N. DiStefano @ 4:30 PM  Permalink | 2 comments
Thursday, April 30, 2009

Eric Mayberry is out as publisher of the daily newspaper Metro Philadelphia, a free handout that litters Septa stops across the Delaware Valley, after he tried and failed to buy the paper from its parent company, Metro International. He won't be replaced, and the paper will be run from New York in the future, Mayberry tells me.

Mayberry says he's started a new firm, SmartBoy Enterprises LLC, "a media entertainment managing consulting company," which will lobby to help his old employer win a cut of state and city legal ads now reserved for paid papers like the Inquirer. He says he'll also write a column in the company's New York and Philadelphia dailies, subject "to be determined."

Mayberry "is leaving Metro Philadelphia in much better shape than when he arrived," said Metro International president Per Mikael Jensen in the statement Mayberry sent out. The ex-publisher said his company is also "creating a testing service and database of high school athletes," www.premiercombines.com. "I am not really a newspaper executive," Mayberry added in his statement.
 

Posted by Joseph N. DiStefano @ 3:37 PM  Permalink | 1 comment
Thursday, April 30, 2009

The banks that dominate the credit card business -- JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citi, American Express, Discover -- have cut back on new loans and boosted rates.

They're also under attack by Democrats in Congress and the Obama administration, who want limits on arbitrary rate hikes, as U.S. Rep. Paul Kanjorski, D-Pa., told me this morning.

So why are Visa's profits and its share price rising? While the banks that use Visa make (or lose) billions on borrowers' interest payments (or defaults), the San Francisco-based credit card network gets paid a cut of every card transaction -- credit or debit, charge or default.

And nowadays, most people who use Visa cards aren't borrowing money, notes Janney Montgomery Scott analyst Leonard DeProspo. "For the first time," he told me, citing Visa's quarterly earnings report from last night. "U.S. debit card usage was greater than credit card usage...

When it comes to making purchase, people are switching to electronic payment, and away from paper-based forms of payment like cash and checks." Also, "as conmsumers bump into credit limits, or as carrying debt with high interest rates become less desirable, they use credit cards less, and debit cards more, particularly for small everyday purchases." Visa's share price rose on higher profits today, though it's still below last year's highs. Rival MasterCard is expected to report tomorrow.

Posted by Joseph N. DiStefano @ 3:23 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
Thursday, April 30, 2009
Eastern University, the Baptist-affiliated college based in St. David's on the Main Line, has leased 60,000 square feet to house a new charter school and consolidate its graduate urban studies program and other classes at Falls Center, the former Medical College of Pennsylvania complex now owned by 3300 Henry LP, an affiliate of Iron Stone Real Estate Group.
 
"It's a dramatic shift for them. It represents their committment to the city," said Iron Stone partner Jason Friedland. He wouldn't disclose the price. He said Fall Center's office space -- 300,000 square feet -- is now more than half leased, with tenants including St. Christopher's Pediatrics and Resources for Human Development, among others. Iron Stone is also developing housing and stores on the 12-acre site.
 
Eastern is moving programs now housed at 990 Spring Garden St. to the Falls Center, along with the new Eastern University Academy Charter School, which should open this year with an initial 102 students in Grades 7, 8, and 9, said Eastern spokeswoman Linda Olson. She said Eastern hopes eventually to grant college credits for courses at the Academy, under a plan developed by the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation.
 
 
Posted by Joseph N. DiStefano @ 2:45 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
Thursday, April 30, 2009
"Chrysler LLC, the automaker that survived a near-death experience in 1979, filed today for bankruptcy protection to streamline operations and shed debt in a reorganization that includes Italy’s Fiat SpA as a partner," writes Bloomberg LP here.

Chrysler "missed a U.S. government deadline to come up with a restructuring plan by today that was rigorous enough to avoid bankruptcy and qualify for more bailout aid. The carmaker tried to negotiate an alliance with Fiat, reduce $6.9 billion in secured loans and cut $10.6 billion owed to a pension fund... Lenders refused... 

"The carmaker and the government plan to use the bankruptcy process to revitalize Chrysler by putting its best assets, such as its Jeep and Dodge Ram brands, in a new company that wouldn’t be burdened by current costs and debt. A slimmed-down version of Chrysler, armed with Fiat’s small-car technology, would emerge from such a process, giving the carmaker a “new lease on life,” U.S. President Barack Obama said today."

Posted by Joseph N. DiStefano @ 2:04 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
Thursday, April 30, 2009
"Electronics customers are indicating some benefit  from the China stimulus package," and electronics sales will rise this year as a result, DuPont Co. chief executive Ellen J. Kullman told investors last week. And, while some other ag markets are flagging, China rice, fruit and vegetable growers are boosting purchases of DuPont's Rynaxypyr insecticide and other agri-tech. All that makes China an exception in a world of what Kullman calls "further deteriorating economic conditions."

Will China lead the world out of recession? "China is shovel ready!" argues economist Ed Yardeni. He cites, from Caterpillar's quarterly report: "China, with an economy one-third the size of the United States, is allocating over three times as much for infrastructure and initial results from this package look promising." And he notes United Technologies and Eaton, as well as DuPont, "are starting to see results from China's plan." 
Posted by Joseph N. DiStefano @ 12:09 PM  Permalink | 1 comment
Thursday, April 30, 2009
As our colleague Suzette Parmley has noted, Donald Trump's Atlantic City casinos (among other things he owns) are in bankruptcy reorganizations.

But that hasn't stopped Trump from bragging he's raised enough millions to launch a string of "cash-and-grab" purchases of big, troubled developments in Scotland, reports the Scotsman newspaper here.
Posted by Joseph N. DiStefano @ 11:19 AM  Permalink | 1 comment
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
LLR, the $1.4 billion Philadelphia private-equity fund founded by Seth Lehr, Ira Lubert and Howard Ross, will pay $23.3 million, or 43 cents a share, for I-many, a Nasdaq-traded business software firm in Edison, N.J. LLR also pays off I-many's $17 million in debt and obligations, and takes control of its $8 million in cash.
 
Expect more of these going-private transactions as cash-rich p.e. firms like LLR do the math on penny-stocks like I-many.
 

 

Posted by Joseph N. DiStefano @ 7:07 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Bank of America shareholders voted to separate chief executive Ken Lewis from his second job as chairman of the board of the troubled giant bank and investment company. He's still CEO, but similar votes in the past have meant the end, for example, for Lewis' former rival, Kennedy Thompson of Wachovia Corp. Bloomberg story here.

 

Posted by Joseph N. DiStefano @ 6:55 PM  Permalink | 1 comment
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
A hundred days into his job, Pennsylvania state treasurer Rob McCord says he feels like the proverbial "dog that caught the car." Big problems:

1) Pennsylvania's Guaranteed Savings Program, for citizens who pre-pay their college tuition, is running a $300 million deficit. Savers paid in $1.3 billion, but under state management (and the stock market decline) it's only worth $1 billion. People will need that money as their kids start college in years to come.
 
To boost returns, McCord wants to invest more of the money in high-yield junk bonds -- and in federally-backed Term Asset-backed Loan Fund (TALF) securities, which include federal guarantees against large losses, modest face-value returns, and the prospect of "double-digit" returns as markets recover. (Pennsylvania's $500 million Section 529 college savings program, run by Vanguard Group, is also down, but that's savers' problem -- there's no state guarantee for 529.)
 
2) Treasury's check-payment and software system is "antiquated." McCord says he's had to ask for $30 million to prevent a collapse.

3) The State Employees' Retirement System (SERS) and Public School Employees' Retirement System (PSERS) still don't know whether the billions they pumped into "alternative assets" (the kind of stuff McCord managed in his previous profession) have lost more, or less, than stock investments. But SERS managers "erred" in leveraging past stock investments; at both funds, assets are down, and liabilities are surging as more teachers and workers retire at higher pay grades. Again, McCord wants to invest more in TALF. Still, "2009 is not going to be a good year at the pension funds."
 
This isn't why McCord ran for office -- he still has a long list of loan and education programs designed to benefit "Pennsylvanians who work hard but play by the rules" -- but crisis management is the priority for governments these days.
Posted by Joseph N. DiStefano @ 4:16 PM  Permalink | 3 comments
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About Joseph N. DiStefano
Joseph N. DiStefano writes this blog to feed his PhillyDeals column, which is printed in the business pages of The Philadelphia Inquirer every Sunday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. Joe has worked at the Inquirer, mostly, since 1988. He has also written for Bloomberg and Gannett, authored the book Comcasted, majored in economics at Penn, and fathered six children. Reach Joe at 215-854-5194 and JoeD@phillynews.com