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29 Apr 2005 The New York Stock Exchange
will merge with Archipelago and be moved to Chicago over time
unless other bidders succeed in taking over the Stock Market.
Shocking news to say the least that one of the oldest traditions
as we know it will cease to exist. Stocks Plummet on Signs of
Economic Slowdown.
Thursday - April 28, 2005 Data showing the economy growing at
the slowest pace in two years during the first quarter pushed
investors into selling mode today and prompted just the latest
in a string of recent triple-digit losses for the Dow. The Commerce
Department said gross domestic product expanded at an annual
rate of 3.1 percent in the first quarter [compared to China's
robust economy is at a 9% growth rate.
WSJ.com - US Home The Wall Street Journal
Home Page ... NYSE Chief Thain discussed details
of the exchange's plan to acquire Archipelago with Wall
Street veteran John Mack [online.wsj.com WSJ.com -
Wall Street Journal Video: Richard Breeden,
Archipelago board member and former SEC chairman, discusses
Goldman's ... lifestyle trends and updates on Wall
Street market numbers.
Top Stories from The Wall Street Journal Online:
The NYSE's move to acquire electronic-trading concern
Archipelago is a bet by Big Board CEO Thain. [biz.yahoo.com/wsj/
]
- Morningstar - Dow Jones & Company,
Inc.: Archipelago and
the NYSE, has raised some eyebrows on Wall Street.
With Wall Street firms seeking additional information
on the Archipelago deal. ...
news.morningstar.com/news/DJ/M04/
D26/200504262139DOWJONESDJONLINE001103.html http://money.cnn.com/2005/04/24/news/sources_grasso.dj/
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- Home Depot Co-Founder To Counter
NYSE Offer
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Langone may bid for Archipelago. Home Depot co-founder reaching
out to Wall Street chiefs to counter NYSE offer, sources say.
April 24, 2005: NEW YORK (Dow Jones) - Financier Kenneth Langone
is mounting a rival bid to buy electronic trading platform Archipelago
Holdings, a move rich in Wall Street politics that threatens
to derail its proposed union with the New York Stock Exchange,
according to people familiar with the matter.
The Home Depot (Research) co-founder and friend of
former NYSE chief Dick Grasso quietly reached out to a number
of Wall Street chief executives, asking them if they would be
interested in participating in a counterbid for Archipelago.
Langone, according to some of the CEOs who spoke to him, is angry
that investment bank Goldman Sachs Group (Research)
took the rare step of acting as advisor to both Archipelago and
the NYSE, a move many on Wall Street believe to be a conflict.
He also thinks Archipelago (Research) is worth
more than the NYSE is offering -- 30 percent of a new company
that NYSE seatholders will get the rest of.
Now, Langone is considering mounting a counteroffer for Archipelago.
It is too early to say how much support Langone's bid will get.
However, if the chairman of investment firm Invemed Associates
LLC manages to secure serious financial backing, it could threaten
the proposed merger of the NYSE and Archipelago, a deal that
if approved by regulators will transform the 212-year- old NYSE
into a publicly-traded company and push its largely human-based
trading floor head first into the world of electronic trading.
Langone declined to comment. "I am not saying anything.
I don't know where you got that," he said when reached at
his home Saturday. The NYSE declined to comment. A spokesman
for Goldman Sachs said he found news of Langone's bid "
curious."
Langone, these CEOs say, has indicated he already has lined up
some support and has requested a meeting with a number of Wall
Street chiefs in order to gauge their interest in participating
in a rival bid.
No date has been set for the meeting, these people say. Some
Wall Street CEOs say they are reluctant to attend but may send
a representative.
Grasso Connection
One thing is for sure: Langone's bid
is loaded with Wall Street politics. He is a longtime friend
of Grasso, who in the fall of 2003 was ousted from his job following
a public outcry over his $200 million-plus compensation package,
which he amassed during his 35-year tenure at the NYSE.
Goldman Sachs chairman Henry Paulson
Jr ., a former NYSE director, voted to get rid of Grasso and
is largely viewed by supporters of Grasso as the ringleader who
worked behind the scenes to have him removed from the NYSE. In
the end, the board voted Grasso out. Not longer after, Goldman
president John Thain was installed as NYSE CEO, replacing Grasso.
New York State Attorney Eliot Spitzer
is suing Grasso, seeking to force him to give back part of his
pay package. Langone , who chaired the NYSE's compensation committee
for part of Grasso's tenure as NYSE chairman, is also a subject
of Spitzer's lawsuit. Langone , claims Spitzer , kept key details
of Grasso's pay from the larger board.
Grasso and Langone have said they did
nothing wrong and have vowed to fight the charges.
It now appears the sparks may start flying before the court case,
scheduled for 2006, begins. This time, Langone's anger at Paulson
is focused on its hand in orchestrating the NYSE's acquisition
of Archipelago, which has been offered a 30 percent stake in
the new company, NYSE Group Inc., that will be formed.
Goldman wears many hats in the deal. It acted as financial advisor
to both the NYSE and Archipelago. As well, it has a 15 percent
stake in Archipelago and owns Spear, Leeds & Kellogg LLP,
a specialist firm that owns seats on the stock exchange. Goldman
would get shares in NYSE Group from both of those interests,
giving it a stake of less than 5 percent.
As well, Thain still has deep ties to
Goldman, located just down the street from the NYSE.
It is rare, but not unheard of for a firm to act as advisor to
both sides of a transaction. Based on records compiled by Thomson
Financial, an adviser has worked for both sides in fewer than
500 of the 145,000 deals announced since 1982.
Goldman, for instance, hasn't been an
adviser on both sides of a transaction since 2001, and played
that role in only eight transactions in the 1990s, according
to Thomson. Still, in this day and age of heightened regulatory
scrutiny and sensitivity to conflicts, many executives on Wall
Street have expressed shock that Goldman decided to act for both
parties.
They also add Goldman was helping to
set valuations of businesses for which it was a direct beneficiary.
"If the clients don't think there is a conflict, there is
no conflict," said a Goldman spokesman.
Some of the CEOs Langone has reached out to say they share his
view on Goldman's involvement.
"Goldman is getting this for a steal," Langone said
to one of the Wall Street CEOs he talked to last week, according
to one person familiar with the matter.
It may not be easy for Langone to pry
Archipelago from the clutches of the NYSE. The firm's agreement
with the NYSE has provisions that make it difficult for the firm
to accept a richer offer, according to a person familiar with
the contract.
The NYSE declined to comment. Still,
news of a rival bid could be good for Archipelago shareholders,
which have already seen the value of their shares increase 58
percent since the merger was announced.
It is too early to say how much the new company will be valued
at, but based on Archipelago's stock-market value Friday of $1.4
billion, the combined company is currently worth about $4.7 billion
.
However, NYSE seat holders -- who will get $300,000 in cash plus
a 70 percent stake in the new company and who have been grumbling
that the deal doesn't give them enough -- may see their stake
fall even further if Langone's bid for Archipelago picks up steam
and the NYSE is forced to make a richer counteroffer. |