Boston Scientific won’t take no for an answer

boston scientific_logo2.jpgguidant_logo_web8.jpgGosh, just a little over two months ago, Johnson & Johnson was threatening to walk on its proposed $25.4 billion ($76 per share) merger with Guidant. J&J eventually agreed to stay in the deal after Guidant agreed that J&J could knock $4 billion off the purchase price.
But then, Boston Scientific got in the game for Guidant. Before you know it, J&J was making nice with Guidant and had increased its bid for Guidant back up to $24.2 billion ( $40.52 in cash and .493 shares of J&J stock for each Guidant share) with a quick closing date. Guidant’s board accepted that revised offer and J&J heaved a sigh of relief until . . .
Boston Scientific announced this morning that it had increased its bid for Guidant to an eye-popping $80 a share or more than $27 billion. With that offer, it now appears that J&J may have to raise its offer to above the $25.4 billion, $76 per share offer that J&J originally agreed to pay for Guidant.
Does anyone else get the sense that J&J wished it had never heard of such things as “material adverse effects” and Eliot Spitzer?
Update: And Guidant has switched allegiances and now supports Boston Scientific’s new bid.

How many Texans have been on the Supreme Court?

Tom clark.jpgWith the confirmation hearing for U.S. Supreme Court nominee Samuel A. Alito, Jr. coming to a close this week, it’s time to dust off a good Supreme Court trivia question that you can use to stump your colleagues: How many U.S. Supreme Court Justices have hailed from Texas?
The answer is one — Tom Clark, who President Truman appointed in 1949. Justice Clark served until 1967 when fellow Texan Lyndon Johnson engineered Clark’s resignation so that Johnson could appoint the first black Justice — Thurgood Marshall — to the Supreme Court. How did President Johnson induce Justice Clark to resign? By appointing Clark’s son Ramsey as Attorney General of the United States. Johnson really could get things done, eh?
With the Supreme Court in the news, the University of Texas’ fine Utopia site has made Justice Clark’s personal papers available on the Web. The materials “contain a comprehensive record of Justice Clark’s activities as a U.S. Supreme Court Justice, public servant, and advocate for improved judicial administration. . . [f]rom . . . 1949 until his death in 1977.” The site focuses on court documents relating to Judge Clark’s work in the areas of desegregation, school prayer, voting rights, civil rights, and much more.
Hat tip to the Librarians Internet Index via ZiefBrief for the link to Justice Clark’s papers.

The Tulia nightmare

Tulia.jpgMuriel Dobbin’s Washington Times review of Nate Blakeslee’s new book on the Tulia scandal — Tulia: Race, Cocaine, and Corruption in a Small Texas Town (PublicAffairs 2005) — says it all about the enduring legacy of racism in American society:

It was only six years ago that it happened, but it could have been 60. Decades after the gains of the civil rights movement in the battle against discrimination, this book warns that it isn’t over. This is the disturbing chronicle of what happened in the bleak little west Texas town of Tulia when a rogue cop ran amok and organized a drug sweep that put a substantial number of the black population in jail for allegedly dealing powdered cocaine. . .
This book is dark evidence of the kind of racism that still lingers in America, from corrupt cops and judges to an indifference to justice most commonly associated with the deep south of the 1930s. . . .
Almost as difficult to believe as the Tulia sting operation are the dimensions of the legal battle it took to reverse the conviction of the Tulia defendants and disclose that [rogue police officer Tom] Coleman had a record of leaving jobs with unpaid debts and had a reputation as a racist and pathological liar obsessed with guns. Mr. Blakeslee’s meticulous account of court proceedings and legal actions underscores the racist roots as well as the inadequacies of justice on the Texas panhandle.

Read the entire review. Tulia reminds us that the stubborn prejudice noted earlier here remains woven tightly within the fabric of American life. When the dark passions of racism are combined with the power of the state, the damage to lives, justice and the rule of law is truly foreboding.

Jobs Tweaks Dell

Back in 1997, shortly after Steven Jobs had returned to be Apple Computer’s CEO in what at the time appeared to be a last-ditch attempt to revive the flagging company, Dell, Inc. founder and chairman Michael Dell was asked at a technology conference in front of thousands of techies what might be done to fix Apple:

“What would I do?’ Dell replied. “I’d shut it down and give the money back to the shareholders.”

Well, times change and iPods became popular, so a 12% surge in Apple’s stock price last week pushed the company’s market capitalization to $72.13 billion, which made it greater than Dell’s $71.97 billion market cap. Given that milestone, how much do you think Jobs enjoyed sending the following email to Apple’s employees at the end of last week as reported in this NY Times article?:

“Team, it turned out that Michael Dell wasn’t perfect at predicting the future. Based on today’s stock market close, Apple is worth more than Dell. Stocks go up and down, and things may be different tomorrow, but I thought it was worth a moment of reflection today. Steve.”

Nevertheless, Dell’s personal net worth estimated to be in excess of $14 billion still dwarfs that of Jobs, who is “only” worth five billion or two. Several years ago, when Apple wasn’t doing as well as it is now, Jobs traded options on Apple stock that would now be worth $3.3 billion for a more conservative package. So, based on Apple’s current $80 per share value, Jobs gave up about $2.5 billion in that deal. Jobs’ main wealth now is in his stake in the animation company Pixar. That stake is valued at around $3.5 billion.

Spinning the new date for the Shell Houston Open

shologo3.gifLast week, the PGA Tour announced its new schedule of Tour tournaments to begin during the 2007 season, and it remains to be seen how a new date for the increasingly-troubled Shell Houston Open (“the SHO”) will play out.
As noted in this previous post, the SHO has suffered over the past several years for a variety of reasons, including the fact that its recent date has been the relatively unattractive week just two weeks after The Masters Tournament. At the current time of the SHO, most of the best Tour players are taking a break from the Tour before gearing up for the U.S. Open in June.
However, under the revised Tour schedule beginning in 2007, the SHO will be moved to the weekend before The Masters. The Houston Golf Association — which runs the SHO — had been hoping for a date on the new schedule that would have been the weekend before the new spot for the Players Championship, which will be played after The Masters in mid-May under the new schedule rather than in mid-March before The Masters as it is currently scheduled.
As you might expect, the HGA is putting the best spin on the new date as possible. “Clearly our new date will generate additional excitement in the marketplace because we may attract even more marquee players to the Shell Houston Open,î said HGA president Steve Timms in a statement on the SHO website.
Count me as not so sure. Although the current date two weeks after The Masters is certainly not ideal, moving to the week before The Masters might be even worse. Under the new schedule, the Tour players will be finishing up a month-long swing through Florida, which will include a new World Golf event at Doral during the week before the SHO. After playing at Doral, the top Tour players may find it easy to skip the long jaunt to Texas and simply opt to take a week off to prepare for The Masters.
For the organizers of a tournament that attracted only two of the top ten Tour players during last year’s event, that new schedule has to raise more than a few concerns that efforts to elevate the Shell Houston Open to the first tier of the non-major Tour tournaments simply may not be feasible under the Tour’s present setup.

Successful Enron veterans expose myths

enron_logo18.jpgA couple of NY Sunday Times articles reports on the success of a number of former Enron executives. However, in doing so, the Times misses a major point that is sadly lacking in most mainstream media accounts of Enron’s demise.
This interesting Alexei Barrionuevo piece examines the rebounding energy trading business, a productive and profitable sector of the economy that was virtually shut down in the aftermath of market-maker Enron’s bankruptcy case. The article does repeat a few of the common myths about the energy trading business, such as “traders manipulate markets,” “trading increases energy costs,” and “traders caused California’s power crisis.” Overall, though, the article does a good job of presenting how bright, young traders — many of whom formerly worked for Enron — invested their own money when the energy trading industry almost ground to a halt in early 2002 and now are profiting as the comeback of this valuable sector of the economy provides companies flexibility in providing for — or hedging the risk of — their energy needs.
Meanwhile, this Times article notes that Rich Kinder of Kinder Morgan Inc. was recently named chief executive of the year by Morningstar, Inc. Kinder is a former long-time Enron executive who left the company in 1996 to set up Kinder Morgan after six years as president when former Enron chairman and CEO Ken Lay passed him over for the chief operating officer position in favor of Jeff Skilling.
The Times blurb on Kinder implies that Enron’s monkey-business began after Kinder left the company, and that is certainly true with regard to former Enron CFO Andy Fastow’s shenanigans with certain special purpose entities. However, the Times fails to note that the vast majority of business activities that made Enron such an extraordinarily successful company during the 1990’s — both in its primary business activities and in the ways in which it raised money — were taking place while Kinder was Enron’s president just as they were five years later when the company collapsed into bankruptcy. Unfortunately, an enormous and unnecessary loss of wealth occurred as many of the markets for Enron’s beneficial and innovative financial transactions — such as the energy trading industry and structured finance use of derivative pre-pay forward contracts, to use just two examples — shriveled in the wake of the societal demonization of Enron during 2001 and thereafter.
Consequently, Kinder’s success after leaving Enron actually emphasizes a point that the Times and much of the mainstream media completely misses — i.e., that it is critically important in determining the truth of what happened at Enron to distinguish between Enron’s role as a legitimate, innovative company and the limited fraud that took place. As noted in this prior post, the Enron Task Force is currently struggling with that realization in its prosecution of Lay and Skilling. A more truthful analysis of Enron’s demise would likely result if much of the mainstream media would catch on and take notice, too.

Ben Love and Richard V. Johnson, R.I.P.

RichardVJohnson.jpgben_love.jpgTwo of Houston’s most prominent businessmen of the past generation — former Houston Chronicle publisher Richard V. Johnson and former Texas Commerce Bank chairman and CEO Ben Love — died over the weekend.
Love was Houston’s most well-known banker since Jesse H. Jones. He oversaw the building of Houston’s Texas Commerce Bank into a Texas banking powerhouse during the 1970’s and early 80’s, and then engineered Texas Commerce’s merger with Chemical Bank after the mid-1980’s economic downturn in Texas caused several major bank failures and near-failures. Love later authored a book about his life in banking, Ben Love: My Life in Texas Commerce (Texas A&M Press 2005).
After his retirement from banking in 1989, Love dedicated the remainder of his life to charitable and civic causes, particularly the University of Texas Health Science Center and M.D. Anderson Health Science Center in the Texas Medical Center. Love’s son Jeff is a prominent lawyer with the Houston office of Locke, Liddell and is well-known in Houston legal and business circles for his formidable vocabulary, which his father helped him develop by requiring Jeff and his sisters to learn and discuss a new word each evening at the family’s dinner.
Johnson oversaw the expansion of the Chronicle into Houston’s sole daily newspaper over most of a 20 year period from 1975-95, and was instrumental in the sale of the Chronicle by the Houston Endowment (created by Jesse Jones in the late 1930’s) to the Hearst Corporation in the late 1980’s. Johnson was also active in a wide array of charitable causes, including the Texas Medical Center Board of Trustees, the Houston Food Bank, the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, the Houston Grand Opera, the Museum of Fine Arts and the United Way of the Texas Gulf Coast.

Winding up an Enronesque experience

Spitzer50.jpgGreenberg19.jpgThis Wall Street Journal ($) article on Friday (USA Today article here) reports that government authorities led by New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer are finalizing a settlement with American International Group under which the company would settle civil business fraud charges for between $1 and $1.5 billion. The anticipated deal does not settle similar civil claims against AIG’s co-defendants in the case, former chairman and CEO, Maurice “Hank” Greenberg and former CFO Howard Smith.
Spitzer has probably maximized his political benefit from persecuting AIG and particularly Greenberg, and AIG — by offering up to Spitzer a number of sacrificial lambs, including Greenberg — has already avoided an Enronesque experience. So, the proposed settlement is really not surprising. However, it still is important to step back and assess what happened here, particularly in view of — as Larry Ribstein notes — the appearance of regulatory extortion.
Spitzer publicly demonized a pattern of structured finance transactions at AIG that had been in place for years. Rather than undertaking a measured regulatory review of the complex transactions — which, by the way, were not even clearly material to AIG’s $80 billion plus equity value — Spitzer threatened AIG with a criminal indictment, which would probably have put AIG out of business (remember Arthur Andersen?). Then Spitzer went on television to pronounce that the AIG transactions were “wrong,” “illegal,” and fraudulent even though it was not yet clear what the charges were, much less whether they were true. AIG’s board quickly cratered and unceremoniously showed the door to Mr. Greenberg, who was primarily responsible for creating huge amounts of shareholder wealth over the past generation. Mr. Greenberg was not even able to present his side of the story before AIG’s board bowed to the Lord of Regulation and characterized the transactions as “improper.”
In short, Spitzer used public allegations of business fraud to charge, try and convict easy and popular targets — i.e., a big company and its allegedly greedy leader — even before he announced that he wasn’t going to pursue criminal charges against Greenberg. Much of the mainstream media has embraced this public relations abuse while portraying Spitzer as the defender of noble egalitarianism fighting against the forces of corrupt capitalism.
As noted recently here in regard to Enron case, many legitimate business transactions — most notably structured finance transactions that most prosecutors and journalists neither understand nor do the homework necessary to understand — are unfairly and incorrectly portrayed as complex business frauds in the wake of such seemingly simple morality plays. Completely ignored in the process is the fact that such transactions build wealth in companies for the benefit of shareholders, and that such transactions are usually reviewed and approved by multiple professionals who are experts in such transactions. Rather than protecting shareholders or any meaningful public purpose, Spitzer’s investigation of those transactions in regard to AIG — as noted here and here — simply damaged AIG and its shareholders.
Meanwhile, with the inviting prospect of greater political rewards resulting from the favorable publicity of knocking a wealthy businessman off his perch, Spitzer has dispensed with any notion of prosecutorial discretion in regard to his investigations of business. Although Spitzer’s political campaign and his media friends portray him as a hero to shareholders and the common man, my sense is that the AIG case offers powerful evidence of precisely the opposite.

The sociological importance of hoops

gloryroad3.jpgThe new movie Glory Road — the story about the 1966 National Championship Texas Western University basketball team — opens this weekend, and the story of that great team reminded me of my late father‘s use of basketball to teach me one of my life’s most valuable lessons.
In 1966, I was a 13 year-old basketball-consumed youngster in the somewhat sheltered existence of Iowa City, Iowa, a lovely midwestern college town where the University of Iowa is located. That season, the NCAA Basketball Tournament’s Mideast Regional was in Iowa City and my father graciously decided to let me tag along with him to the tournament games. Little did I know that part of my father’s purpose in doing so was to expose me to one of the most intimidating examples of racism that I would experience during my youth.
The four teams playing in the Mideast regional that year were Michigan (the Big 10 champ and one of the Iowa Hawkeyes’ arch-rivals), Kentucky, Dayton and Western Kentucky. My father was a native of Louisville, Kentucky, so he had always followed UK basketball, although he was partial to his alma mater Louisville and to Iowa after watching Big 10 sporting events for many years while teaching medicine at the University of Iowa College of Medicine. As a big basketball fan, I knew all about Kentucky basketball and its legendary coach Adolph Rupp, but that did little to prepare me for the sociological experience that was about to take place in the old Iowa Fieldhouse over that weekend in 1966.
You see, each of the teams in that regional except Kentucky was integrated, and it became clear from the moment I set foot in the hot, dusty arena that the antipathy of racism was about ready to boil over at almost any point. As Kentucky defeated Dayton and Michigan beat Western Kentucky in the semi-final games, many of the numerous Kentucky fans openly hurled insults at the black players for the other teams. Moreover, most of the Kentucky fans refused to cheer for the neighboring Western Kentucky team in its semi-final game against Michigan because of the presence of black players on the Western Kentucky squad. Rupp — who was a daunting and imposing figure on the sideline — didn’t even attempt to hide his contempt for the black players of opposing teams. Inasmuch as the Iowa baskeball teams that I had followed had already been integrated with black players, I had never experienced anything close to the seething impulses of racism that were palpable in the Iowa Fieldhouse that Friday evening.
Throughout that entire evening and the following Saturday, my father never mentioned anything to me about the acrimonious atmosphere in the Fieldhouse. However, as Michigan — with its star black players Cazzie Russell and Oliver Darden — took on the all-white Kentucky team in the Mideast Regional final game on Saturday night, there was no doubt that my father and I were pulling for Michigan to pull the upset over Kentucky. Alas, Michigan lost a close game to UK in that regional final, which set up Kentucky’s journey to the Final Four that season and its eventual loss to that special Texas Western team in the National Championship game. My father and I took great pleasure the night of that championship game in seeing the mighty Rupp and his UK team brought to their knees by an unknown underdog from far West Texas, and I have felt an affinity for that Texas Western team ever since.
While golfing together many years later, I asked my father why he had said nothing to me about the open expressions of racism that we saw and heard during that weekend of basketball in 1966. He looked at me and — fully cognizant of my youthful disdain for Michigan — replied with a wry smile:

“There was nothing to say. When I saw that you were pulling for Michigan, I knew you had figured it out.”

The bidding over Guidant heats up

boston scientific_logo.jpgIn response to Johnson & Johnson’s increased bet earlier this week for heart-device maker Guidant, Boston Scientific has matched J&J’s bet and upped the ante.
Gee, wasn’t it just a few weeks ago that J&J was getting assistance from the Lord of Regulation in driving the price of Guidant down?
Boston Scientific’s sweetened bid is valued at $25.55 billion and gives Guidant’s board board until Friday afternoon to fish or cut bait on the offer. Boston Scientific’s new offer is valued at $73 per Guidant share (up from its earlier $72 per share offer) and deletes most of the conditions in prior bid that made J&J’s competing offer (valued at $67.92 per Guidant share) look to be more likely to close and, thus, a better risk for Guidant. What a far cry from the $56 per share price of Guidant’s shares just two months ago when J&J was threatening to walk the deal.
Update: Guidant Corp.’s board accepted the Johnson & Johnson offer late Friday and rejected the larger but potentially more time-consuming competing Boston Scientific offer. The agreement is valued at $24.2 billion, consisting of $40.52 in cash and .493 shares of J&J stock for each Guidant share and is scheduled to close as early as Jan. 31. Boston Scientific — which, unlike J&J, would have still had to obtain government regulatory approval of its bid — had hoped to close its proposed deal by March 31.