Romania striker Adrian Mutu has failed in his bid to overturn an order to pay Chelsea €17.17 million (Dh89m) in damages after his appeal was dismissed by the Court of Arbitration for Sport. Now playing for Fiorentina in Italy, Mutu was fired by the English club five years ago following a
Posts Tagged ‘bid’
Striker must pay €17m fine
Should UK hacker be extradited?
UK hacker Gary McKinnon has lost his High Court bid to avoid extradition to the US. What is your reaction?
Colin Powell Endorses NYC Mayor Bloomberg’s Re-Election Bid
NEW YORK — Former U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell has endorsed New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s re-election bid.
Powell offered the endorsement Tuesday during a taping of the “Larry King Live” show on CNN. He calls Bloomberg…
GM ‘clearing the air’ over Opel
I was a bit surprised to receive a ‘push’ email from GM directing me to a blog posting on GM Europe’s corporate blog. It just said in the body text: ‘please note there is a new blogpost by John Smith, GM group vice president and GM’s chief negotiator for the sale of Opel, on http://drivingconversations.gmblogs.com/’ Short and sweet. Okay, I thought, let’s have a gander.
I guess the people at GM – especially in Europe – felt compelled to have something said to the outside (and inside) world, anything. So, what do we have. Well, it’s decision time, folks. But GM is kind of stuck. Magna’s bid has gone down well in Germany, but GM – the firm actually making the sale, remember – has problems with that bid (mainly connected with the bidder’s Russia requests; the Russians want to get their mits on Chevrolets in Russia).
The RHJ International bid looks much more attractive to GM. RHJ is potentially a much more compliant partner and there may even be an opportunity to buy Opel back later on when the good times are rollin’ again (tongue is slightly in my cheek, but GM tails are most certainly up post-Ch11).
But there is no decision, yet. There’s something of an impasse in the negotiations that is taking up a lot of management time. And the world may as well know that directly, rather than get it from continual media leaks (and, if you look at how this story has been covered, pretty accurate ones – don’t blame the messenger).
It could be that John Smith’s blog is designed to do a number of things:
- Simply clarify to all – not least people inside GM Europe as well as the media – why there has been no further announcement or news in the sale process;
- Put pressure on Magna for concessions in the negotiations;
- Put pressure on the German government to, in turn, put pressure on Magna or make representations to Russia’s government;
- Keep the RHJ International pot simmering away, their bid by no means dead – a message GM perhaps wants to send, in particular, to Germany.
I have seen these deadlocks in business before. It can go on forever when you have something that looks intractable and high-level officials go around in circles, getting stuck on the same point and the detail – which is indeed tricky to sort. The Big Wigs get briefed. The impasse continues unless there is a ticking time-bomb of some sort that focusses minds as deadlines near (there isn’t in this case – I gather that GM Europe’s financial position isn’t critical now). It sometimes needs quite a mental leap to resolve things, on the part of one or both parties.
Isn’t this the point at which Messrs Stronach and Henderson chew the fat over a game of golf? You never know, they might see a workable solution by the time they get to the 18th – or indeed, in the bar. Turn Chevrolet Russia into a JV of some sort?
Chicago Olympics Bid Dogged By Recession
On a recent afternoon, Mayor Richard M. Daley delivered his annual speech on the condition of the city he has run for 20 years. Revenues may fall $250 million short. Some city workers must take 15 unpaid days this year, including Mr. Daley. Mo…
Wal-Mart’s Chicago Push Gets Hip-Hop Backing (VIDEO)
Supporters of Wal-Mart’s controversial bid to open a second Chicago store, at 83rd at Stewart in Chatham, now have starpower on their side.
Chicago hip-hop artist Rhymefest joined the pro Wal-Mart groups, Jobs or Else and the Walmart Communit…
Threat to England’s World Cup bid
• RFU remain confident they will be hosts
• Springboks believe process was biased
South Africa will today attempt to torpedo England’s chances of hosting the 2015 rugby World Cup by arguing that the bid process was flawed and weighted in Twickenham’s favour.
The tournament’s hosts are due to be named today when the International Rugby Board’s council meets in Dublin. England has been recommended to the council as the preferred choice of the Rugby World Cup Ltd (RWC) board. But South Africa and Italy, the two countries who lost out, were lobbying furiously yesterday to try to derail England’s bid.
If they can persuade the council not to rubber-stamp a recommendation which would make England the 2015 hosts and take the 2019 tournament to Japan, a decision on where those events will be played will be determined by a vote of the council members. South Africa and Italy, together with England and Japan, would make their pitch to the council before the vote is taken.
South Africa’s challenge to the English bid is less against the decision that was made than the way it was done. They claim the tender specification was twice changed, once to England’s clear benefit when the condition that bids had to be underwritten by a government guarantee for the £80m demanded by RWC was dropped. England, unlike South Africa, had no such guarantee.
South Africa also believe that the process favoured Twickenham from the start because the IRB needs a cash-rich tournament in 2015, with the 2011 World Cup in New Zealand set to bring in the lowest return for 12 years. It was an open secret that IRB officials wanted England to make a bid to help make up for the shortfall expected in New Zealand.
The IRB has held off negotiating some commercial deals, such as television rights, for 2011 in the hope of getting more lucrative deals on the back of its announcement of the 2015 hosts. The board believes a World Cup held in England could make a profit close on £200m. South Africa struggled to sell tickets for the recent Lions tour and the opening Tri-Nations match against New Zealand on Saturday.
“Time will be set aside for us to state our case,” said Johan Prinsloo, the chief executive of the South African Rugby Union. “We are concerned about the process that was followed before the recommendations were made. We said as much in a letter to the IRB but, unfortunately, I cannot be specific. We have also spoken to the people we needed to because there were issues and we made sure we went through the right channels.
“We believe we must arrive at the right rugby decision. We have a strong case. We wouldn’t go to these extremes if we didn’t think we had a chance.”
South Africa’s seven-strong delegation arrived in Dublin on Sunday. Key unions in the vote, such as Australia, New Zealand, Scotland, Ireland and France were being lobbied yesterday in a five-star Dublin hotel. The new tendering process, which left it to the RWC to make a recommendation to the council, had been designed to avoid this but some council members are upset at effectively losing some of their power.
The RFU is confident its bid will be approved. “We were delighted to be recommended for 2015 but we know that it is not the end of it,” said the RFU’s commercial director, Paul Vaughan. “Our bid was based on maximising revenue with the New Zealand World Cup not likely to be particularly brilliant from a financial aspect. We expect to sell enough tickets to be able to give RWC a surplus, on top of all they will take from the commercial arrangements. Our bid would give them the maximum amount to distribute throughout the game over the following four years.
“That will be our argument to the council. We are not going to lobby for votes in the traditional way by offering this or that: we are simply going to show that a World Cup in England in 2015 would be the best for the world game. That is something, at a time of economic recession, that should be paramount in the minds of everyone. The IRB makes its money from World Cups and ours will deliver.”
A decision on the 2019 hosts is also due to be made today and Japan have been proposed to stage that event. South Africa and Italy have pitched for both tournaments but are mainly interested in 2015.
England and Japan need 14 votes to get the recommendation through. The council is 28-strong, but two, the vice-chairman, Bill Beaumont and the chairman, Bernard Lapasset (unless it is the casting vote) do not have votes. The four home unions, France, Australia, South Africa and New Zealand have two votes each; Italy, Japan, Argentina and Canada one each and the continental unions – Africa, Europe, North America, South America, Asia and Oceania – also having one each.
Japan hosting the latter tournament is seen by the IRB as not just a way of exploiting the potentially lucrative Asian market but helping the Board in its bid for rugby to become an Olympic event in October.
Hillary Clinton Says “No, Never” To White House Bid
WASHINGTON — There is apparently no such thing as a simple yes or no when it comes to Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and questions about another run for the White House.
Clinton, 61, seemed to go further Sunday than she had p…
Egypt backs Belgrade’s NAM summit ambition
Egypt support’s Serbia’s bid to host the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) 2011 summit, Beta news agency reports. The summit will be held on the 50th anniversary since the movement was founded.
Greeks highest bidders for EPCG
A Greek consortium has offered the highest bid to buy 18.3 percent of Montenegro’s energy company EPCG, according to reports. Greek news agency ANA says that the consortium is lead by public energy company PPC, and also includes privately-held firm Golden Energy One – member of Restis Group.
Chicago Olympics Bid Gets Congressional Thumbs-Up
The House of Representatives today threw its support behind Chicago’s bid to host the 2016 Summer Olympics.
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Reyne Haines: Collecting Your Childhood Memories Is Gonna Cost Ya
It’s not cheap to bring a piece of nostalgia back into your life these days. If your mom threw out your old comic books, make sure to share this blog with her
Political quagmire
Analysis
By Jorn Madslien
Business reporter, BBC News

The long, drawn-out negotiations surrounding the sale of Opel and its Vauxhall division in the UK are characterised by conflicting ambitions and a set of reluctant participants.
General Motors (GM) is the reluctant seller.
The US automotive giant is having to hive off a majority stake in its European divisions – and thus accept that it is no longer the world’s largest automotive group – as part of a restructuring programme put in place in the wake of GM’s bankruptcy filing in May.
But it is not happy about it, not least because it faces the prospect of one day competing with Opel, both at home in the US as well as in emerging markets, notably Russia.

The German government, meanwhile, is a reluctant participant in the saga, having stepped in with a 1.5 billion-euro (£1.3bn) bridging loan to prevent the company collapsing.
Collapse would lead to the closure of Opel factories and the loss of thousands of German jobs in the run-up to the election on 27 September.
Germany is also prepared to add 3bn euros of loan guarantees to the new owner, in addition to the bridging loan.
Together, GM and Germany are stakeholders in a trust that was created to own a 65% stake in Opel until a sale had been completed.
And a sale, say industry observers, will not happen anytime soon – in spite of Monday’s deadline for potential buyers to get their binding bids in.
Reluctant assistance
On Wednesday, the two will assess the three bids it received on Monday – from the Austrian-Canadian car parts maker Magna, in a consortium with Russia’s Sberbank and Oleg Deripaska’s truck firm Gaz, from Brussels-based private equity-backed RHJ International and from China’s Beijing Automotive (BAIC).

Though very different in character, each bid has merits, so the final outcome remains uncertain.
- Magna and its Russian partner Sberbank’s are offering 750m euros for a 55% stake – split equally between the two with 27.5% each. They would require Germany to guarantee loans of some 4.5bn euros. This bid is widely seen as the front runner.
- RHJ wants a 51% stake in return for 175m euros now and a further 100m euros tranche on 31 December 2012. It would require 3.8bn euros in loan guarantees from Germany.
- China’s Beijing Automotive (BAIC) has not released details of its bid, but it is reportedly sweet at some 660m euros for a 51% stake. Moreover, it is said to require just 2.6bn euros in loan guarantees from Germany.
GM and the German government are in no position to agree on who to sell to just yet, however.
First they must consult the governments of countries where Opel or Vauxhall has plants, namely the UK, Spain, Belgium and Poland.
The European Commission will also have a say, since all these countries may wish to – albeit reluctantly – step in with further financial assistance to help a new owner safeguard jobs. The Commission will have to consider whether such state assistance is acceptable.
And do not forget Washington. The US government owns 61% of GM, which recently emerged from bankruptcy, and will need to be consulted.
Global battle
In addition to the need to consult governments about loan guarantees and suchlike, a geopolitical contest between the US, China and Russia, arranged by a European host, is emerging.

All four are eager to protect jobs in their own countries or regions, at some cost to tax payers.
- GM, which is now 61% owned by the US government – has hinted that it believes the RHJ bid could be a real contender to the Magna bid.
- The BAIC bid’s relatively low reliance on German loan guarantees is seen by some as an indication of Chinese government backing, though even if such support is not explicit the company’s global ambitions for the Opel brand would fit neatly with those of the nation.
- Russia hopes Sberbank’s bid will enable it to share in Opel’s sales growth once the Russian market eventually bounces back from this year’s slump. In 2009, Russian car sales are expected to halve or worse.
- Germany, which favours Magna, seems prepared to accept that the Kremlin will have a finger in the pie as long as Magna’s industrial ambitions are given breathing space. Magna has said it will new models and seek to develop Opel further.
Political solution
And in the end, the German voice will probably carry the most weight, since it is providing the 4.5bn-euro loan guarantee. If Germany is not happy about the way GM deals with the affair, it could – at least in theory – withdraw the offer.
The most likely outcome, therefore, is a sale to Magna and Sberbank, though perhaps only after GM has secured further concessions.
Industry observers say the biggest risk to the Magna deal is that GM’s demands become so onerous that they simply walk away.
Either way, a buyer is expected to be chosen by the end of July with a view to have a deal agreed by 31 October.
If the issue drags on beyond the German election, expect the Germans to start playing hard-ball. By then, the cost to German tax payers may be as much of a concern as jobs to the government.
If so, the issue may well become a topic of discussion between the German Chancellor and the President of the United States.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Green Party Candidate Rich Whitney Making Another Bid For Governor
Next year’s election for Illinois governor has its first Green Party candidate.
Giannoulias Raises Almost $2M Toward Senate Run
Illinois Treasurer Alexi Giannoulias has raised $1.8 million for his Senate bid, while his likely Democratic rivals have zero dollars in their war chests.
More on Senate Races



