Archive for June 18th, 2008

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Huntsman Corp. (NYSE: HUN) is seeing the value of its stock destroyed in after-hours trading. This was one of those pending mergers that was old enough that many had forgotten it was even on the docket. Hexion Specialty Chemicals has announced that it has filed suit in Delaware to exit its contractual obligations to acquire the company.

The Hexion-led filed to terminate its proposed $10.6 Billion acquisition of Huntsman Corp. Hexion has said in this suit filed that it believes that the capital structure concurred to by both Huntsman and by Hexion for the combined company is no longer viable.

The reasons noted are because of Huntsman’s increased net debt and its lower than expected earnings. Hexion notes that both companies are individually solvent but it believes that the merger’s capital structure previously concurred to would render the combined company insolvent.

Keep reading at 247WallSt.com for the rest of the details and analysis.

 

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Huntsman Corp. (NYSE: HUN) is seeing the value of its stock destroyed in after-hours trading. This was one of those pending mergers that was old enough that many had forgotten it was even on the docket. Hexion Specialty Chemicals has announced that it has filed suit in Delaware to exit its contractual obligations to acquire the company.

The Hexion-led filed to terminate its proposed $10.6 Billion acquisition of Huntsman Corp. Hexion has said in this suit filed that it believes that the capital structure concurred to by both Huntsman and by Hexion for the combined company is no longer viable.

The reasons noted are because of Huntsman’s increased net debt and its lower than expected earnings. Hexion notes that both companies are individually solvent but it believes that the merger’s capital structure previously agreed to would render the combined company insolvent.

Keep reading at 247WallSt.com for the rest of the details and analysis.

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LinkedIn is the social networking operator that just about each business person has received an invite to join from at least one person they know.

The company issued a press release this morning noting that it has secured $53 million in additional funding in a capital raise. This was its fourth and largest round of funding and is stated to value the company north of $1 billion. What’s perhaps more interesting than anything is that the finding was from a private equity-led group rather than from venture capital. Bain Capital Ventures, the VC unit of Bain, led the financing with additional reinvestment from the company’s existing investors:

  • Sequoia Capital,
  • Greylock Partners,
  • and Bessemer Venture Partners.

Over 23 million professionals use LinkedIn to keep in touch with old contacts, to reach new contacts, to problem-solve, and more.

To top matters off, CNBC hosted the head of the company, Dan Nye, earlier this morning and the hint of going public was much more than a hint. It seems like you can probably expect an S-1 filing with the SEC in the relatively near future if things continue, even though that timing could be later in 2008 or into 2009 or even never. But the ‘we are going for valuations much higher than this’ line was a hard one not to notice. Personally, I’ll go ahead and ‘bet the over’ that we see an IPO filing in the coming months as long as market conditions don’t go further awry.

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Americans spend billions of dollars in bank fees every year, and at least one customer, Judith Tremblay, is a tiny irritated about it. She has good reason. She’s been stewing over and trying to mend what she feels is an injustice for over a year now.

Tremblay, 43, had been a customer at Citizens Bank for 12 years when she noticed a monthly fee on her and her husband’s bank statement. She asked her spouse about it, and he replied that he assumed it was a standard charge that they had to pay. After all, it was there each month.

Curious, Tremblay called the branch near her Salem, New Hampshire home and learned that the $17.50 monthly fee was an error. Because they’d something called Circle Gold Checking, the Tremblays were supposed to be exempt from the fee. But instead, the $17.50 had gone unnoticed.

When Tremblay asked for her money to be returned, she learned that she could, indeed, get a refund — but only for the last three months: $52.50.Tremblay can do math. The bank had been charging the Tremblays $17.50 every month for possibly 12 years, which would be $2,500. Maybe it had been 9 or 10 years. She didn’t have bank records stretching back 12 years in order to find out. She asked Citizens Bank if they could determine just how long they’d been improperly debiting money each month, and they stated that they didn’t know, but they could do some research.

The research would cost Ms. Tremblay $35 an hour.

Fuming, she declined.

There’s a little more to this story, like the letter that Ms. Tremblay sent to her bank, after a series of phone calls. The letter can be found on the blog at the web site of Matt Baron, a publicist in Chicago, who I know and have worked with. Judith Tremblay is Matt’s older sister.

Now, much as I feel for Ms. Tremblay, I can see the bank’s side, sort of. They’ve been sending the statement to the Tremblays for umpteen years, and Judith’s husband has presumably looked at his statement each month for years and never noticed the discrepancy. It is his responsibility to go over his statement each month.

And yet — assuming this story is true, and I have no reason to believe otherwise — it was the bank’s mistake. Even if there’s or should be a statue of limitations on bank errors, three months? Why not a year or two or five? Why shouldn’t the bank eat the $35 an hour research costs and figure out what they owe the Tremblays and at least give them half, if not all, of their money?

Banks are generally pretty dedicated to making customers pay for their errors with overdraft fees and non-sufficient fund charges. In fact, earlier this year, as reported in this CNN story and many others, the General Accounting Office came out with a report that gave the tally for money Americans paid in bank fees for 2006: $36 billion.

And the report’s conclusion? That Americas are “ill-informed” about our banking fees.

No kidding. Apparently some banks are ill-informed, too.

Geoff Williams is a business journalist and the author of C.C. Pyle’s Incredible Foot Race: The True Story of the 1928 Coast-to-Coast Run Across America (Rodale). He’s currently poring over his own bank statement.

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