Posted in Dow Jones, New York, News International, Rupert Murdoch, Wall Street, Wall Street Journal
Dow Jones, owner of The Wall Street Journal is being sold to Rupert Murdoch’s News International.
Dow Jones is reported to have agreed a $5 billion. Negotiations have been completed and the board is confident the terms of the deal will be accepted by the Bancroft family, which controls a majority of voting shares in Dow Jones, over the next few days. A formal announcement is expected next week.
The Business Online exclusively reports :
Murdoch’s News Corporation will take over America’s most prestigious financial publisher at the price he originally offered on April 17, when he proposed $60 a share when the stock was trading at $36, a 67% premium … The arrangement is a tougher version of the one put in place by the British government when Murdoch bought The Times and The Sunday Times in 1981. Murdoch will have less control over the independent directors at the Journal than he does at Times Newspapers, where they are regarded as weak and ineffectual. But one source, acting for the Bancrofts, admitted privately that the Dow independent panel was only a “fig leaf†to facilitate the sale and that over time Murdoch would get round it.
Stay tuned for more news from the billabong.
Update: Wired is reporting a refutation of this story : “An article published on Thebusinessonline.com this morning stating that an agreement in principle has been reached for the sale of Dow Jones & Company to News Corp is incorrect.â€
Heads up Robert Scoble.
Posted in Financial Centre, Hong Kong Stock Exchange, LSE, London, London Stock Exchange, New York, New York Stock Exchange
The London Stock Exchange retained its number one spot as the world’s most successful borse in the first half of the year.
A report from Dealogic gives the LSE initial public offerings worth £16.8bn ($34bn), compared with New York’s £15.1bn ($31bn). Hong Kong trailed in third place with just £7.4bn despite its proximity to the burgeoning Chinese growth engine.
With reports that this bonanza may have peaked, especially from Russia, Michael Long, an analyst with Keefe, Bruyette and Woods, said : “There is a concern that a lot of the Russian listing is a bit bubbly.”
However, he didn’t see much sign of New York improving its relative market share on IPOs. “It’s cheaper to do them here, regulations are less complicated and strenuous, and they argue there’s a bigger international investor base here than in the U.S.”
The good times continue.
Posted in Financial Centre, London, London Stock Exchange, Nasdaq, New York, Wall Street
The new edition of New York Magazine asks, is New York falling behind London?
As I wrote over in Syntagma, “Certainly the City — London’s world-class financial centre — is much more vibrant than Wall Street, which is suffering the dead hand of Sarbanes-Oxley regulation. The light-touch, principle-based system of the Square Mile knocks spots off New York’s draconian regime. This, almost alone, allowed the London Stock Exchange to survive a ferocious takeover bid from New York’s Nasdaq recently, simply by pointing out to shareholders that it was in a much better financial position than the American exchange. That kind of insouciance can’t be bought, only built. Very English.”
The magazine also asks, Are we no longer the world’s financial capital?