Tag: Business

  • Medallion Financial’s portfolio: taxis, teams and anti-terrorism

    Since its beginnings, Medallion Financial has been guided by a catchy core philosophy: “In niches there are riches.”

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    The company grew from a single taxicab in New York City to a multimillion financier of cab medallions in New York, Chicago and Boston.

    Who knew, decades ago, that taxis could be so valuable? Polish immigrant Leo Murstein knew.

    It’s unlikely, though, that even Murstein, who bought his first medallion for $10 in 1937, envisioned what his enterprise would become. Medallion Financial (Nasdaq:TAXI) is now a publicly traded company whose board includes baseball great Hank Aaron, former New York Gov. Mario Cuomo and former Connecticut Gov. and U.S. Sen. Lowell Weicker.

    Murstein’s son Alvin and grandson Andrew run the company, and they’re branching out into sectors that could hardly be considered niches. Medallion is a lead investor in public companies looking to acquire sports ventures and security firms.

    Sports Properties Acquisition (AMEX:HMR), a Medallion investment chaired by former Buffalo Bills quarterback and U.S. Sen. Jack Kemp, raised $200 million when it went public in January.

    Another Medallion venture, National Security Solutions (AMEX:NSX.U), has notified the SEC of its plans for an IPO. The company, which intends to acquire domestic and/or international security firms, is led by Howard Safir, former New York City police and fire commissioner.

    Director nominees include Weicker and former homeland security chief Tom Ridge. Advising the company are former FBI director Louis Freeh and former United Nations ambassador Richard Holbrooke.

    If portfolios are sociology, there’s a fiddling-while-Rome-burns dimension to the mix of investments.

    Sports Properties notes in its annual report:

    There has been a continuing increase in attendance at sports and entertainment events, and many cities have expressed interest in having sports teams, including Las Vegas, Houston, Rochester, Orlando, Portland, Los Angeles, Oklahoma City, Kansas City, Hartford, Winnipeg and Seattle. A significant opportunity exists to establish new franchises, or relocate existing franchises.

    The security business is also a booming, as pointed out in the prospectus filed by National Security Solutions:

    The homeland security industry is among the fastest growing industries in the world, with a global market that is expected to grow from approximately $55 billion in 2006 to more than $170 billion by 2015 … Over the past few years, consumers, corporations and governments in the United States and abroad have faced a wide range of threats for which security and homeland defense solutions are constantly being sought, including threats to life and safety, physical and identity theft, intellectual property compromise, vandalism, counterfeiting, fraud, industrial espionage, threats to critical infrastructure, threats to fossil fuel supplies from foreign sources and terrorism.

    The original source of Medallion’s wealth was an ideal moneymaker: Seemingly unlimited demand for a restricted supply. In New York City, there are only 13,150 cabs with city-regulated medallions. The number is controlled by the city Taxi & Limousine Commission, which reported in December that the average medallion cost $426,000 for individual owners and $600,000 for corporate owners.

    Medallion’s trade was built on strong relationships with brokers and cab drivers. The latest ventures also rely heavily on the recruitment of people who are known and trusted, but in much bigger power circles. The celebrity of Kemp, Cuomo, Aaron and Weicker opens doors and reassures investors.

    The company may be able to find niches in fields already crowded with competitors. (What multimillionaire doesn’t want his own sports franchise?)

    How it fares in the coming months may well depend not only on its acquisition targets, but on its network of contacts.

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  • CBS will pay $1.8 billion for CNET Networks

    CBS announced today that is acquiring CNET Networks Inc., for $1.8 billion, at $11.50 per share.

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    CNET, which holds the coveted news.com domain name, operates a range of web sites, including CNET, ZDNet,
    GameSpot.com, TV.com, CHOW and Search.com.

    Leslie Moonves
    Leslie Moonves

    As Dealbook notes today, CBS chief Leslie Moonves said a year and a half ago that the company wasn’t interested in pricy web acquisitions. “We are not going to spend $1.6 billion on YouTube,” he said then, referring Google’s purchase of the video site.

    Moonves has apparently changed his mind. In today’s press release, he says, “There are very few opportunities to acquire a profitable, growing, well-managed Internet company like CNET Networks.”

    Jana Partners LLC, CNET’s largest shareholder, had pushed for a higher stock price. Jana has not yet responded publicly to the CBS announcement.

    The deal may affect content distribution for other web publishers. CNET currently provides content to Hulu, a subsidiary of NBC.

    The purchase will bring significant online traffic to CBS. In the fourth quarter of 2007, CNET claimed 148 million unique users per month. The company also boasts a strong presence in Asia and Europe.

    CNET, one of the early publishers on the web, was founded by Shelby Bonnie, who stepped down after an internal audit found back-dating of stock options. Bonnie went on to found Political Base.

  • Amidst Bear Stearns takeover, Greenberg and Cayne criticize each other

    The animosity between Bear Stearns’s former chairman Alan Greenberg and its soon-to-be former chairman James Cayne has become painfully public.

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    As The New York Times writes today, “their sometimes tumultuous relationship has boiled over into an outright feud.”

    Greenberg claims that he warned Cayne about the dangers of the firms investment in subprime mortgages, but that Cayne refused to listen. Cayne, the Times reports, has told colleagues that he never received such advice from Greenberg.

    Now, with the pending takeover by JPMorgan, the two men’s fortunes couldn’t be headed in more different directions.

    Greenberg he sold his stock regularly before the decline. JPMorgan has invited him to remain as vice chairman emeritus. And he’s writing a memoir, a narrative that isn’t likely to favor Cayne.

    Cayne, widely blamed for Bear’s near failure, leaves the company next month. His personal wealth plummeted by $900 million with the collapse of Bear’s stock.

    “Goodness,” Greenberg commented, when Times reporter Landon Thomas Jr. mentioned Cayne’s loss in net worth. “That’s a shame.”

  • The Bill Gates portfolio – beyond Microsoft

    Business manager Michael Larson has a portfolio of billions of dollars and a client list of one.

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    Larson, a former bond investor with Putnam Investments, picks stocks for Cascade Investment LLC, whose sole owner is Bill Gates.

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    Larson is known as a conservative investor who maintains a low profile. However, regulatory filings by Cascade provide a glimpse into the decisions he and his boss are making.

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    At the end of 2007, Cascade reported $4.2 billion in publicly reported securities. More than $570 million was in Berkshire Hathaway, the company headed by Gates’s good friend Warren Buffett.

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    Cascade also holds a 10.8 percent stake in GAMCO Investors, Inc., a firm led by Mario J. Gabelli. Gates and Gabelli have done business in the past. In 1999, Cascade loaned $25 million to Gabelli’s local telephone venture, the Lynch Interactive Corporation.

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    Cascade’s biggest investment was in the Canadian National Railway, with holdings worth more than $1.6 billion.

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    Other bets by Gates’s investment vehicle included the Mexican media company Grupo Televisa, the Mexican brewer Fomento Economico Mexicano and the waste-management company Republic Services.

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    Gates has invested in several energy ventures, including ethanol producer Pacific Ethanol and PNM Resources, a utility based in Albuquerque, NM. Another investment, Minnesota-based Otter Tail Corporation (NASD: OTTR), provides electric power, as well manufacturing and health services.

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    Cascade has lesser investments in two companies that have seen their stock price decline in recent months – Six Flags Inc. (NYSE: SIX) and Planetout (NASD: LBGT). PlanetOut, a publisher targeting gays and lesbians, announced earlier this month that it would sell its magazine and book divisions and focus on its online activities.

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    Cascade Investment was so-called because “Cascade” is a generic business name in the Northwest. No sense in drawing undue attention.

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    Larson, who has worked for Gates since 1994, generally stays out of the limelight. However, in a rare interview with Fortune in 1999, he said he had the best job in the world.

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    “It’s pure investing,” he said. “No marketing. Not much management. And client relations is limited to one guy.”

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  • Biogen Idec Rejects Carl Icahn Slate

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