Sunday, April 3, 2011
Nasdaq May Face Antitrust Obstacles in $11.3 Billion Bid for NYSE Euronext
Nasdaq May Face Antitrust Obstacles in $11.3 Billion Bid for NYSE Euronext
Nasdaq OMX Group Inc. (NDAQ) may face antirust obstacles in its bid to acquire NYSE Euronext (NYX), the owner of the New York Stock Exchange, two law professors said.
The combination would give Nasdaq a monopoly on listing corporations in the U.S., world’s largest capital market. That is likely to raise U.S. Justice Department concerns that the deal would be anticompetitive, said Herbert Hovenkamp, a professor at the University of Iowa College of Law in Iowa City.
If antitrust regulators limit their analysis of a combined exchange to the U.S. market, the merger would be “way over the threshold of illegality,” Hovenkamp said in a phone interview. The proposed acquisition poses less of a problem should the Justice Department view the deal in the context of the worldwide market for listed stocks, he said.
Nasdaq and IntercontinentalExchange bid $42.50 in cash and stock yesterday for each NYSE Euronext share, or about $11.3 billion.
Stock exchanges around the world are consolidating to stay competitive and attract worldwide issuers. More than $20 billion in proposed acquisitions have been announced in the past five months as exchanges in North America, Europe and Asia try to cut costs and seek new revenue from trading in options, futures and derivatives.
NYSE Euronext was formed when the operator of the New York Stock Exchange bought Europe’s second-largest exchange in 2007. It now owns exchanges in Amsterdam, Lisbon, Paris and Brussels as well as London-based Liffe, Europe’s second-largest derivatives market.
Defining the Market
“If the market is worldwide or bigger than the U.S., then it’s a more open game,” Hovenkamp said.
NYSE Euronext also runs three U.S. stock exchanges: NYSE Arca, NYSE Amex and the New York Stock Exchange, two options platforms and the NYSE Liffe U.S. futures exchange.
General Motors Co., for instance, could decide to be listed on the German stock exchange if Nasdaq’s combination with NYSE allowed it to charge excessive fees, Hovenkamp said.
The Justice Department also must be convinced that the deal wouldn’t lead to fewer technological innovations, said Harry First, a professor at the New York University School of Law and a former state antitrust enforcement chief.
“When a single provider controls the whole business, it doesn’t have the incentive for innovation,” he said in an interview at a Washington antitrust conference.
First said there could be an extended review by antitrust officials because of the deal’s size and complexity.
source: bloomberg.com
U.S. Service Industries Probably Grew at Close to Fastest Pace Since 2005
U.S. Service Industries Probably Grew at Close to Fastest Pace Since 2005
Service industries probably expanded in March at close to the fastest pace since 2005, a sign the U.S. economic expansion is broadening beyond manufacturing, economists said ahead of a report this week.
The Institute for Supply Management’s index of non- manufacturing businesses was little changed at 59.5 after a 59.7 reading the previous month that was the highest since August 2005, according to the median of 53 forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey ahead of the April 5 data. Another report may show first-time filings for unemployment benefits fell last week.
Faster job growth may help sustain household spending against a backdrop of higher food and fuel bills that have damped consumer confidence. Federal Reserve officials said last month the economy is on “firmer footing,” diminishing the need to extend a bond purchase program beyond June.
“The service sector still looks very strong,” said David Semmens, a U.S. economist at Standard Chartered Bank in New York. He said the economic recovery “is more sustainable” because “you are seeing a better pickup with regard to it being driven by the consumer.”
A reading above 50 signals growth for the Tempe, Arizona- based ISM’s measure. The supply managers group reported on April 1 that its manufacturing index expanded last month at close to the fastest pace in almost seven years.
The factory gauge was little changed at 61.2 after a February reading of 61.4 as production rose to the highest level since January 2004. The strength in the industry is generating greater demand for services, which account for almost 90 percent of the economy, benefiting companies such as FedEx Corp. (FDX)
FedEx Benefits
Memphis-based FedEx, which operates the world’s biggest cargo airline, said March 17 that its per-share earnings for the fiscal fourth quarter ending May 31 will be $1.66 to $1.83 a share.
“Our businesses are performing strongly in the United States, where industrial production growth is expected to approach nearly 5 percent in 2011, outpacing GDP and supporting overall transportation volumes,” Fred Smith, chief executive officer of FedEx, said in a teleconference.
The U.S. economy added more jobs than forecast in March and the unemployment rate unexpectedly declined to a two-year low of 8.8 percent, an indication that the labor-market recovery is strengthening, Labor Department figures showed April 1.
Payrolls increased by 216,000 workers last month after a 194,000 gain the prior month. Economists projected a March gain of 190,000, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey. Service providers added 185,000 workers last month, the most since May 2010.
Higher Stocks
Stocks rose last week, adding to gains from the market’s biggest first-quarter rally since 1998, after the jobs report. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index gained 0.5 percent on April 1 to 1,332.41 at the 4 p.m. close. Both the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at their highest levels since Feb. 18.
Fewer firings are another product of the expanding economy. The number of Americans applying for unemployment insurance fell by 3,000 to 385,000 last week, the lowest level since the end of February, according to the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg before the April 7 Labor Department report.
Employment gains may help Americans dealing with higher food and gasoline prices. The average cost of a gallon of regular-grade fuel reached $3.62 on March 31, the highest since September 2008, according to AAA.
The central bank, after its latest policy meeting March 15, pledged to continue its program of purchasing $600 billion of bonds before the second half of the year, in order to “promote a stronger pace of economic recovery.” Fed officials also said the economy was on “firmer footing” and acknowledged a rise in commodity prices, signaling deflation risk had diminished and they were unlikely to expand the bond purchase plan.
The Fed will release minutes of the March meeting on April 5.
Bloomberg Survey
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Release Period Prior Median
Indicator Date Value Forecast
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ISM NonManu Index 4/5 March 59.7 59.5
Initial Claims ,000’s 4/7 2-Apr 388 385
Cont. Claims ,000’s 4/7 26-Mar 3714 3700
BCCI 4/7 4-Apr -47 n/a
Cons. Credit $ Blns 4/7 Feb. 5.0 4.8
Whlsale Inv. MOM% 4/8 Feb. 1.0% 1.0%
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source: bloomberg.com
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