1:53 PM
By Soyoung Kim and David Bailey
NEW YORK/DETROIT | Wed Nov 3, 2010 4:12pm EDT
NEW YORK/DETROIT (Reuters) - General Motors on Wednesday finalized terms for a stock offering of nearly $13 billion to repay a controversial taxpayer-funded bailout and reduce the U.S. Treasury to a minority shareholder.
GM's filing with U.S. securities regulators marks the final step before it begins marketing what is expected to be one of the largest-ever IPOs. The investors are expected to span the globe and include sovereign wealth funds.
The automaker plans to sell 365 million common shares at $26 to $29 each, raising about $10 billion at the midpoint, according to updated initial public offering papers filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
In addition, GM said it plans to sell about $3 billion of preferred shares that would convert to common shares under mandatory provisions, a less risky form of equity that could attract dividend and growth-fund investors.
The offering, potentially the largest U.S. IPO since Visa Inc's $19.7 billion IPO in 2008, would cut the U.S. Treasury's current 61 percent stake to just over 43 percent.
GM's underwriters could sell an additional 54.75 million common shares and 9 million preferred shares if the IPO attracts robust investor demand, raising another roughly $2 billion and potentially taking the total IPO amount to as much as $15.65 billion, the company said in the amended prospectus.
The Treasury, which holds a 60.83 percent stake in GM as a result of its $50 billion bailout, is cutting that stake to 43.26 percent in the IPO, excluding the overallotment option.
Once a blue-chip stock, GM is expected to return to the New York Stock Exchange under the "GM" ticker symbol it had traded under before its 2009 bankruptcy.
GM is expected to price its IPO on November 17 and begin trading on the New York and Toronto stock exchanges on November 18, sources have said.
The governments of Canada and Ontario plan to sell down their combined stake to 9.64 percent from 11.67 percent and the United Auto Workers VEBA trust is expected to reduce its stake to 15.33 percent from 19.93 percent.
(Reporting by Soyoung Kim, Clare Baldwin and David Bailey, additional reporting by Jonathan Stempel; Editing by Gary Hill)
5:17 AM
By Michael Smith and Maria Kiselyova
SYDNEY/MOSCOW | Wed Nov 3, 2010 7:30am EDT
SYDNEY/MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russian fertilizer company Phosagro plans to bid for Potash Corp, according to a media report, rivaling BHP Billiton's $39 billion offer awaiting a crucial ruling from the Canadian government.
Phosagro Chairman Vladimir Litvinenko has asked Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin to approve a potential deal and request financing from Russian banks, Russian business daily Vedomosti reported on Wednesday.
The report reignited speculation about a possible bidding war in the world's biggest takeover for 2010 and came on the day Ottawa is expected to tell BHP whether it will approve or reject the deal.
Vedomosti cited a letter from Litvinenko to Putin, a close ally since Putin defended his 1997 PhD thesis at the St Petersburg institute where Litvinenko is rector.
Privately held Phosagro was not immediately available for comment on the report while BHP and Potash declined to comment.
Analysts said it appeared unlikely Phosagro had the financial firepower to make a rival bid unless in conjunction with other Russian players Uralkali and Silvinit -- being merged by potash tycoon Suleiman Kerimov.
"Only if Phosagro, Uralkali and Silvinit combined into a single $25-30 billion company and consolidated their funding capabilities would the remote potential to make a bid for PotashCorp appear," Troika Dialog analyst Mikhail Stiskin said in a note.
He added that a successful bid would put Russia in control of 65 percent of global potash trade -- a key component of world food supplies.
Credit Suisse analysts said Potash Corp could have drummed up the Russia bid as a 'white knight' defense to the unwelcome BHP offer, adding there was "little likelihood" that a takeover would come about.
Phosagro, which Moscow's VTB Capital said had 2009 sales of $1.8 billion, does not disclose its shareholder structure but market players say it is controlled by billionaire senator Andrei Guryev.
Two Canadian newspapers reported on Tuesday that bureaucrats were advising the government to allow BHP's bid for the world's largest fertilizer market although rumors swirled in the markets that Ottawa would block it.
The federal Canadian government will announce its decision on Wednesday, a source close to the matter told Reuters on Tuesday. Ottawa has until the end of Wednesday (0400 GMT Nov 4) to make its ruling public.
No serious rival bidders for Potash have emerged so far. Potash has said it held talks with 15 strategic, financial and state-sponsored potential bidders and investors but admitted in a tough market, a white knight would need more time to raise financing.
Potash has flatly rejected BHP's current $130-a-share offer as inadequate and has repeatedly said it expects other offers.
The Russian newspaper quoted Litvinenko as saying in the letter he knows well Canada's government officials who make decisions on the matter as well as Potash's senior management and that they were not against an alliance with Russia.
12:22 AM
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12:03 AM
Asian stocks up as dollar on backfoot before Fed
Addison Ray
By Sugita Katyal
SINGAPORE | Wed Nov 3, 2010 12:24am EDT
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Asian stocks rose on Wednesday following overnight gains on Wall Street while the dollar was under pressure ahead of a Federal Reserve meeting that is expected to provide more stimulus to spur a flagging recovery.
The MSCI index of Asia Pacific stocks outside of Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS was up 0.34 percent helped by gains in materials and energy in line with Wall Street after a swing toward the Republicans in U.S. elections lifted investor sentiment.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index .HSI leapt to its highest in 28 months, rising 1.9 percent spurred by gains in banks and oil counters.
South Korea's KOSPI .KS11 gained 1 percent on foreign buying with banks and insurers up amid strengthening expectations for an interest rate hike after the Australia central bank's surprise decision to increase rates.
Japan's financial markets are closed because of a public holiday.
The dollar stayed on the backfoot in Asia with the euro holding above $1.4000 and the Aussie just off parity ahead of the Fed meeting.
Due at around 1815 GMT, the Fed is expected to announce plans to buy hundreds of billions of dollars in U.S. government debt in order to foster a stronger economic recovery.
Markets are generally priced for the Fed to initially commit to buying at least $500 billion in Treasuries over five months, although much uncertainty surrounds the scope and pace of bond purchases.
"I think they'll take the approach that central banks usually take for interest rates, which is to make a small change now and reconsider at the next meeting," said Joseph Capurso, currency strategist at Commonwealth Bank in Sydney.
"The market is going to be surprised and the U.S. dollar is going to have a strong across-the-board rally. The market has a lot priced in now and that's keeping the dollar weak."
Markets were also keeping an eye on the results of U.S. mid-term elections on Tuesday. Television networks projected the Republicans would seize control of the House of Representatives although the Democrats were likely to maintain the Senate.
A divided Congress is typically seen as bullish for stocks as it makes passing new laws harder and lessens uncertainty for business.
Some analysts said a Republican victory could also be positive for the U.S. currency on market hopes for increased fiscal austerity and less government regulation.
Gold inched down despite the weaker dollar as investors stayed on the sidelines on the last day of the Federal Reserve's meeting.
Spot gold eased 55 cents to $1,356.45 an ounce, off a two-week high at $1,365.49 hit on Monday. Gold struck a record around $1,387 last month.
11:42 PM
By Pedro Nicolaci da Costa
WASHINGTON | Wed Nov 3, 2010 12:30am EDT
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve is expected to announce a controversial new policy on Wednesday to buy billions of dollars in government bonds in an attempt to breathe new life into the struggling U.S. economy.
The well-telegraphed decision would be aimed at pushing down borrowing costs for consumers and businesses still smarting from the worst recession since the Great Depression, though there are doubts about its effectiveness.
With the U.S. economy expanding at only a 2 percent annual pace in the third quarter and the jobless rate seemingly stuck around 9.6 percent, the Fed has come under pressure to do more to stimulate business activity.
Economists expect a new round of Treasury purchases to total about $500 billion over a six-month period and to be accompanied by a signal that officials, who have been divided over the wisdom of the move, might ramp up the operation if needed.
"We expect the statement will express a willingness -- but not necessarily a bias -- to further increase asset purchases if warranted by economic conditions," said Michael Feroli, chief U.S. economist at JPMorgan in New York.
The Fed is expected to announce its decision at around 2:15 p.m. ET.
POLICY MADE IN USA FOR USA
Markets have already seen sharp moves in anticipation of the Fed's expected resumption of bond purchases, which were first undertaken as a response to the financial crisis of 2007-2009. U.S. stocks and government bonds have rallied, while the dollar has taken a drubbing in advance of the decision.
Stocks have also been supported by expectations -- now validated -- that Republicans, viewed as more pro-business by investors, would seize control of the House of Representatives and pick up Senate seats in elections on Tuesday that were largely cast as a referendum on the economy.
As Republicans campaigned on a smaller government platform, Congress may be less likely to offer fresh stimulus spending if the economy sputters, leaving the Fed as the primary source of support.
The Fed cut overnight interest rates to near zero in December 2008 and has already bought about $1.7 trillion in U.S. government debt and mortgage-linked bonds.
With the prospect of a long period of ultra-low returns in the United States, investors have flocked to emerging markets, pushing those currencies higher. Emerging economies, worried about a loss of export competitiveness, have cried foul.
"We are all under attack by the relaxed monetary policy of the United States," Colombian Finance Minister Juan Carlos Echeverry told investors on Tuesday.
The Bank of Japan, which meets on Thursday and Friday, is also poised to launch a new round of bond buying. The European Central Bank and Bank of England also meet this week, but are not expected to make any changes to policy for the time being.
DEBATING THE RISKS