Saturday, September 6, 2008, 4:13PM ET - U.S. Markets Closed.
NEWS AT A GLANCE
Federal regulators and the shadow banks
Federal regulators are considering bringing lenders and brokers in the so-called shadow banking system under tighter regulatory control. This opaque non-bank financial system grew rapidly over the past decade and had $10 trillion in assets by early 2007, putting it on par with the traditional banking system, according to the Federal Reserve. The financial institutions with the most to lose are the brokerages Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch, Goldman Sachs, and Morgan Stanley. According to regulators, the problem with this system, which came to be a vital source of capital for the U.S. economy, is that its short-term borrowing dried up when things went south, turning a credit correction into a global crisis. (MarketWatch)
UBS banker pleads guilty to aiding tax fraud
Former UBS banker Bradley Birkenfeld pleaded guilty in U.S. federal court to helping extremely wealthy clients evade millions of dollars in U.S. taxes. Birkenfeld's testimony opened a rare window into the super secretive world of Swiss banking, revealing the tricks he said the banks use to help their wealth-management clients flout U.S. tax laws. He had helped oversee $20 billion in assets. (The New York Times, free registration) In other business crime news, prosecutors said they had ample evidence to convict Bear Stearns managers Ralph Cioffi and Matthew Tannin for lying to investors about the health of two hedge funds that imploded, starting the subprime mortgage meltdown. Both were arrested yesterday. (Bloomberg)
Yahoo mulls business reorganization
Amid a number of departures of senior executives, Yahoo is considering a business reorganization that would combine its mail, search, and homepage divisions into a global product unit, according to several news media reports. (Reuters) Yesterday, three top employees, one from each of those divisions, were reported to be leaving the company, joining a growing number of departures since Yahoo and Microsoft ended merger talks. (The New York Times, free registration) Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer quashed rumors that his company will go on an Internet buying spree to make up for the failed Yahoo bid. "People don't understand what they're talking about," he said. "This is about the ad platform." (Financial Times, free registration)
Living on fertilizer, buying in Florida
Russian fertilizer magnate Dmitry Rybolovlev is buying a Palm Beach, Fla., mansion for $100 million, in the most expensive single-family home sale on record in the U.S. The seller? Donald Trump. Trump bought the 33,000-square-foot French Regency-style Maison de l'Amitié at a bankruptcy auction in 2004, for $41.4 million. It has 475 feet of oceanfront property. Trump listed the house for $125 million three years ago, but cut the price in March. Rybolovlev says the house is an investment property, and he doesn't plan to live there. "This is the highest price ever paid for a house," Trump says. "And I think it's a bargain." (The Wall Street Journal)
BEST COLUMNS OF THE DAY
Will China jobs come back?
With the falling dollar, rising wages in China, and an oil-fed spike in shipping costs, says Pete Engardio in BusinessWeek.com, "this would seem to be a good time for an American manufacturing renaissance." But, even with macroeconomic headwinds at America's back, it won't come back overnight. Or cheaply. U.S. manufacturing has "withered in the era of globalization." A lot of manufacturing expertise has moved to China, along with the jobs and infrastructure. But the U.S. is still the world's top manufacturer, and consumer. With a little luck, and venture capital, the U.S. has "as good a chance as anyone" to win jobs in globalization's next round.
Life without Tiger
"Tiger Woods' season-ending injury has some in the sports business world very, very worried," says Darren Rovell in Slate. With Buick canceling a golf clinic and some tournament ticketholders demanding refunds, there's a "mild panic" among the marketers of Tiger tie-ins. But unless your job is to try to get people "excited over Anthony Kim and Ryuji Imada," it's "time to take a deep breath, and maybe an Ambien." Nike, whose golf business wouldn't exist without Tiger, "will be the hardest hit" by his absence from the green. But even its losses "will be as small as a dimple on a golf ball." And the idea that Gillette, Accenture, Electronic Arts, and Buick will be crippled? "Complete bunk."
GOOD DAY FOR: Fuel subsidies, after a recent survey found that 57 percent of companies are trying to help their employees cope with rising commute costs. Common policies are moving to four 10-hour days, promoting carpooling, and telecommuting. Then there's recruiting firm Jobing-dot-com, which gives employees $500 a month and free gas if they allow their car to be covered in the company's logo. (CNN.com)
BAD DAY FOR: The DVD market, after Apple reported the sale of its 5 billionth song through its iTunes Store. While demand for Apple's music downloads shows no sign of slowing, iPod sales seem to be flattening out. Apple, which overtook Wal-Mart as the largest U.S. music retailer in April, said it is now also selling or renting more than 50,000 movies a day through iTunes. (MarketWatch)
NOTED: Japanese bank Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group may invest about $926 million in Britain's Barclays PLC, to help replenish Barclays depleted capital. Barclays, Britain's No. 3 bank, has lost more than $5 billion in the mortgage and credit meltdowns. SMFG, Japan's third-largest bank, is also reportedly considering a business alliance in Asia with Barclays. (Reuters)
This column was written by Peter Weber and edited by Harold Maass of TheWeekDaily.com.

















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