More WorldCom settlements

On the heels of BofA’s settlement earlier in the week, more “courthouse steps” settlements in the WorldCom shareholder class action lawsuit took place on on Friday as four investment banks settled claims arising from their involvement in underwriting bond sales that were based in part on WorldCom’s false financial statements.
Under the latest settlements, Lehman Brothers Inc. settled for $62.7 million and Credit Suisse First Boston, Goldman, Sachs & Co. and UBS Warburg LLC each settled for $12.54 million. All four participated as underwriters in WorldCom’s May 2000 bond offering. Among the 10 institutions that remain in the litigation are JPMorgan Chase & Co. and divisions of Deutsche Bank AG and ABN AMRO Bank.

A really bad season

I knew that Sammy Sosa had a bad season last year, at least by his standards. However, you know that it was a really bad season when it costs the owners of the club three cents a share.

Nervous times at Citgo HQ

This NY Times article reports on the concern in Houston business circles about Houston-based Citgo Petroleum Corp.’s status as the political football of choice for Hugo Ch·vez‘s Venezuelan government, which has controlled Citgo since government-owned PetrÛleos de Venezuela acquired a controlling interest in the company in 1990.
Basically, Mr. Ch·vez and his government have promoted popular sentiment in Venezuela against Citgo’s links to the United States while, at the same time, taking actions that indicate that the government is going to exercise greater control over the company. Citgo brands its name to over 14,000 independently owned gas stations in the U.S. and generates about 15 percent of the U.S. oil refining output.
About a month ago, Ch·vez fired Citgo’s chief executive Luis MarÌn and replaced him with Felix RodrÌguez, who is a senior executive at PetrÛleos de Venezuela and a political hack for Mr. Ch·vez. Then, last week, PetrÛleos de Venezuela purged the entire Citgo board of directors and replaced them with another group of Mr. Ch·vez’s political supporters.
Although the Times article tends to view the Venezuelan government’s control of Citgo as perilous to the U.S. energy market, I’m not buying it. Frankly, it is far more likely that Mr. Ch·vez and his government will make bad decisions regarding Citgo, which will present opportunities for its competitors.