Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) on Today Stocks
The Sydney Morning Herald

Extra cost to break B&B grip

LEND LEASE'S ambition to expand into the retirement home sector through a possible takeover of one of Babcock & Brown's listed funds will have to include a payment of at least $50 million to break a management agreement with the mothership.
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.
The Independent

Babcock & Brown beckons as KKR weighs up bid

Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.

The Sydney Morning Herald Babcock quiet on sell-off

Babcock & Brown has refused to confirm whether Goldman Sachs JBWere and Deutsche Bank have been named independent advisers.
06/24/08
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.

The Sydney Morning Herald KKR interest in Babcock & Brown

Babcock & Brown Ltd (B&B) is in the sights of US private equity firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, according to a British newspaper report.
06/23/08
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.

The Sydney Morning Herald Babcock denies default

Shares in Babcock & Brown rally after the troubled group says it is not in default or breach of its banking covenants.
06/16/08
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.

The Sydney Morning Herald Babcock struggles with banks

Troubled investment firm Babcock & Brown has begun meeting with its bankers, as it goes ahead with asset sales.
06/16/08
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.

The Sydney Morning Herald Babcock disaster looms

Phil Green and his crew are working frantically in the engine room to avert disaster. They have two levers left to pull.
06/13/08
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.

The Sydney Morning Herald Babcock & Brown inferno turns up the...

In his more wistful moments, Phil Green may be given to reflection on the fickle nature of stockmarkets.
06/13/08
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.
The Sydney Morning Herald

Fidelity dumps stake as B&B awaits debt verdict

BABCOCK & BROWN has lost two substantial shareholders in the past fortnight, despite the company receiving a welcome reprieve yesterday with a share price bounce of 13 per cent.
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.
The Wall Street Journal

Margin Lenders Cap Funding to Babcock

Three margin lenders stopped funding purchases of Babcock & Brown shares after a sharp drop in the firm's market value.
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.
Your Ad Here

The Sydney Morning Herald Babcock extends share plunge

Babcock & Brown, Australia's second-largest investment bank, plunged further, falling as much as 24% in early trading.
06/13/08
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.

The Sydney Morning Herald Babcock & Brown share crash opens way...

SHARES in Babcock & Brown crashed 28 per cent yesterday, plunging through a $2.5 billion market capitalisation threshhold that allows its bankers to call for a review of...
06/12/08
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.

The Sydney Morning Herald Babcock to stick with external oversight

THE Babcock & Brown chief executive, Phil Green, gave every impression yesterday that he had listened to investors' fundamental concerns as he launched a review of listed...
05/30/08
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.

The Sydney Morning Herald Babcock satellite's voyage in the rough

Babcock & Brown's leveraged infrastructure model is bound to come under further pressure this week following Friday's dramatic events in satellite group Babcock & Brown Power.
05/25/08
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.

The Sydney Morning Herald Babcock pledges cash for B&B Power

Babcock & Brown is prepared to help Babcock & Brown Power with funding if the banks don't.
05/24/08
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.

The Sydney Morning Herald B&B offers to bankroll B&B Power

Babcock & Brown says it will bail out Babcock & Brown Power with as much as $360m if the listed fund's lenders do not, but investors are sceptical.
05/23/08
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.
Times Online - Business

Angel Trains' owners may pay price for costly leases

Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) completed the first piece of its cash-raising programme yesterday by selling Angel Trains, the train leasing business, to Babcock & Brown European Infrastructure Fund for £3.6 billion. The deal is a key component of RBS’s dash to raise further capital after completing its £12 billion rights issue this week. However the new owners could be forced to sell parts of the Angel business within months if the Competition Commission decides that prices for leasing trains are too high. The Commission ruled last December that there was evidence that prices in the rolling stock leasing market were too high and singled out Angel Trains, the biggest operator, which has about 40 per cent of the market. Speaking on behalf of a consortium of investors, Simon Gray, head of European Infrastructure M&A at Babcock & Brown, said: “We have made very conservative assumptions for this business and planned for all the outcomes. We don’t think that Angel has been making excessive profits and it may well be shown that they have provided good value for money.” Babcock & Brown had to enlist 17 banks to raise the £2.8 billion debt it needed to buy Angel. RBS, which is exiting the industry after 11 years, is one of the banks providing long-term debt. Mr Gray said: “We are seeing a reluctance by banks to put up their balance sheet to underwrite deals. Instead of going to one or two banks, who would syndicate the debt to others, we had to go to a much larger group.” He added that it was not surprising to see RBS continuing as a lender to the new owners: “There would have been concern if they hadn’t been.” The sale of Angel Trains has been a critical part of RBS’s plan to shore up its finances and focus on its main banking business. It is also understood to be selling its insurance businesses – Direct Line and Churchill – for about £7 billion. Analysts believe the bank will make a profit of £250 million to £300 million on the sale of Angel Trains after the consortium, which includes Deutsche Bank, Access Capital Advisers, and AMP, the Australian specialist investor, secured the deal for less than the expected £4 billion. RBS bought Angel Trains in 1997 for £408 million. One of three national “roscos” [rolling stock leasing companies], it provides 4,100 passenger train vehicles and 280 freight locomotives to passenger and freight operators in the UK and Europe. Its customers include 18 of the UK’s 20 train operating companies and it has fleets with South West Trains and Virgin West Coast. It also has a significant order book to build passenger trains, locomotives and wagons, including new Pendolino carriages for routes from London to Glasgow through Manchester. Angel was created in 1994 in advance of the privatisation of the UK’s rail network and is the biggest of the UK’s three train leasing companies. Its rivals are HSBC Trains and Porterbrook which are owned by high street banks HSBC and Abbey respectively. Angel’s buyers hope to capitalise on a growing rail market that has seen passenger numbers rise by 50 per cent and freight traffic up 60 per cent in the past decade, as well as benefit from new European rules on open access. Rob Gregor, the head of European infrastructure at AMP Capital, said: “We believe that the liberalisation of the European market and government investment in the UK mean that this is an exciting time to be investing in the UK and European rail sectors.” Despite the impact of the credit crunch, a spokesman for Babcock & Brown said that it secured debt for the deal on “competitive” terms. Infrastructure assets are seen as a safer bet by investors in the current turmoil. The Babcock & Brown European Infrastructure Fund owns 22.2 per cent of Forth Ports and a stake in Brisa, a Portuguese toll road company. The fund, which closed in November last year, raised €2.2 billion (£1.7 billion), which it will gear up to take long-term stakes in European infrastructure assets. The fund is ring-fenced from its parent company, which is listed in Australia. The parent company saw its shares fall again yesterday, compounding heavy losses earlier in the week. The decline in Babcock’s share price has taken its market value below a level set by its lenders that would trigger a review of its debt agreements. Babcock has said that reaching the review limit does not mean it would have to repay or speed up repayment of its A$2.8 billion ($£1.35 billion) in debt, due by 2011. The sale of Angel completes a busy week for RBS, whose £12 billion rights issue was backed by more than 95 per cent of its shareholders on Monday.
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.
The Sydney Morning Herald

Funds 'not affected' by Babcock review

Two satellite funds managed by besieged investment house Babcock & Brown said the review affecting their parent did not affect them or their debt position.
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.

The Wall Street Journal Babcock Arm Feels Pinch

Babcock & Brown Power wrote down $355 million on its Alinta energy business and posted a loss on the sale of its Tamar power station.
08/18/08
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.

The Sydney Morning Herald Babcock & Brown in trading halt

The securities of Babcock & Brown have been placed in a trading halt at the request of the company, pending an announcement, the Australian stock exchange said.
08/19/08
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.

The Sydney Morning Herald Babcock & Brown forecasts 15% growth

Babcock & Brown has forecast annual profit growth of at least 15 per cent in 2008 after it posted a large rise in 2007 annual profit.
02/21/08
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.

The Sydney Morning Herald B&B units fall after parent seeks...

Shares in Babcock & Brown units fell in early trading after the investment bank requested a trading halt for the parent company.
08/20/08
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.

The Sydney Morning Herald Babcock & Brown shares in trading halt

Shares in Babcock & Brown will now be in a trading halt after the investment group requested the suspension ahead of a meeting of a board subcommittee.
08/20/08
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.

The Wall Street Journal Babcock CEO, Chairman Step Down

Babcock & Brown unveiled a major overhaul of its board and management but failed to stem the drop in its share price due to continued concerns about its financial position.
08/21/08
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.

The Sydney Morning Herald From Green into the red

The former chief executive of Babcock & Brown failed to change methods to suit the market madness, writes Danny John.
08/22/08
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.

The Sydney Morning Herald B&B chief nets $22m in tough year

THERE was no credit crisis when determining the pay packet of Babcock & Brown's chief executive, Phil Green, for 2007, with the beleaguered boss landing $22.1 million in...
04/17/08
Similar news about Babcock & Brown Ltd.
Webmaster