Monday, July 29, 2013

Omnicom And Publicis Announce Completely ... - Business Insider

Publicis and Omnicom just finished their first press conference? announcing their merger, creating the world's largest ad agency holding company.

Here's the official announcement.

The merger is completely unexpected. It was thought that perhaps Publicis might acquire a smaller network, such as Interpublic, or merge with an Eastern rival like Dentsu. The new Publicis Omnicom Groupe will have $23 billion in revenues and a market cap of $35 billion. The new company will have 130,000 employees.

Publicis shareholders will receive a 1 euro special dividend, Omnicom holders will receive a $2 dividend.

Omnicom has scheduled another press event in New York for Monday at 8 a.m.

Here's our live coverage of today's event in Paris:

Publicis CEO Maurice Levy is speaking first, alternating between French and English. He begins by praising Omnicom CEO John Wren.

Now Omnicom CEO John Wren is speaking, in English, to the relief of this reporter. He says talks began six months ago. We were "pinching ourselves a bit and saying is this really possible? Can this really happen?"

"We had many opportunities to test whether we could trust each other or not."

"It is inconceivable that we could take these two great companies and make them greater." He gives credit to Levy for having the idea of the merger first.

Wren is talking about how this will be good for their staff.

It's good from a client's point of view too, he says.

In terms of making both companies' offerings complete, "This gives us the opportunity to accelerate those things."

"Anyone who is concerned about any of this should not be."

"We're going to create value and new opportunities."

Back to Levy, in English.

"It is a merger of equals. The name of the new company will be Publicis Omnicom Groupe, the split of ownership will be roughly 50-50."

"We will be doing this under the ticker symbol of OMC."

$35 billion in market cap.

"This is a new company for a new world."

"A new standard for our industry. Our ambition together is to create that new standard."

"Enhancing growth and optimizing synergies ... enhanced global footprint."

He talks about digital media giants like Google and Amazon: "We will be in a position to better partner with them." (That's about matching them in size at the negotiating table.)

"Revenue of roughly $23 billion."

"Net income of close to $2 billion."

"Tax free for shareholders: It will be holding company based in the Netherlands. We will keep our headquarters in New York and Paris. ... It will be listed on the New York stock exchange and in Paris."

They will be co-CEOs for 30 months then Levy will become chair. The board will have 7 people from each company. Both CEOs will also be on the 16-person board. "We have made a commitment to increase the gender differentiation to come to parity."

Merger is hoped to close at the end of this year.

Now Levy is speaking French again. (Ma francais est terrible, donc je ne sais pas q'est-ce il dire.)

Wren is much quieter at this conference. Perhaps that's because Levy can switch between French and English effortlessly. Wren hasn't spoken a word of French so far.

Wren finally says something in French: "Oui," and everyone laughs.

Questions!

Will you be distracted from work for clients?

Wren: "A bit presumptuous to think I wasn't supported by 70,000 unbelievably productive people."

Levy: There will be a transition team to handle the merger. "We are both very experienced at acquiring and merging. ... Obviously it is a different magnitude but we're not worried about that."

Will the French government block the merger to protect an iconic French company, and what other reg hurdles will there be?

Levy: We are a private company publicly traded but we are in private hands. ... We have informed all the officials yesterday evening and this morning. The reaction we got from everyone was a tremendous support. So we don't expect the French govt will have anything else than great support.

Wren: we count the countries as something between 41 and 46 that we have to get clearances from. ... there's a lot of competition out there at every level ... it's procedural. We don't anticipate anything overwhelming.

Both say they're confident they'll get approvals. "Swiftly and without major issues," Levy says.

Now there's a question and answer from Levy entirely in French.

CNBC asks about job cuts and WPP chief Martin Sorrell. Everyone laughs. (Levy and Sorrell don't like each other.)

Levy: "Martin Sorrell is a strong competitor, a very strong competitor, we respect WPP enormously. We do not define our strategy as regard to what he will think or what he will do. We define our strategy as what is good for our clients, our people and our shareholders."

"Is this a swan song? I don't know. I know when the swan is singing he is dying, so I prefer not think about this." [That's the quote of the day right there!]

Wren: "There's no planned job cuts through this. We're reviewing it as these integration committees come together. ... this wasn't done so we could go in and cut jobs. We wouldn't have done it if that was the only opportunity."

[Readers should note that the press release says they believes they can find $500 million in efficiencies in the merger. At agencies, the biggest operating cost is staff compensation, so it looks like there will be some layoffs.]

Another question in French, and Levy answers.

Wren: In terms of shared clients, there are $6.5 billion in revenues on the OMC side in 2012, he says. "We will have to make commercial decisions about, at some point but it's not overwhelming. Most clients have long since, we've handled the question of conflicts ... extraordinarily well. ... Do I expect it to alter materially anything? Absolutely not."

Wren takes a question in French and answers in English. Compensation will be performance based, he says.

[This French-English thing will be very interesting as the merger plays out. Levy is clearly comfortable in both? languages. But on the American side, how many English-French speakers will there be?]

Bloomberg asks about the breakup fee and the small number of advisors on the deal. (The financial advisors on the deal are Moelis & Company for Omnicom and Rothschild for Publicis Groupe. ) What is the revenue overlap?

Wren: We have a process to go through ... as I said earlier our advisors have not raised any red flags. Eventually there will be a customary fee included if someone were to come in and do anything strange. No one realistically can interfere with a merger of equals. The reason on our side we didn't have more advisors is bec we didn't need them ... Maurice and I settled many of the issues. ... Normal and customary.

"Multiple of our brands are already doing common work, cooperating." Procter & Gamble, for instance. [He says that for instance Levy will have the creative and OMC has the media on many clients.]

Levy: "There were no leaks because we had so very few advisors. ..." He says firewalls or Chinese walls will be built to protect against conflicts.

Question on the $500 million in synergies mentioned in the press release, plus how did the idea first happen.

Levy: "It was not calculated it was just an encounter as we do socially from time time,? ... John thought through, in the meantime we had another encounter, we asked was it a stupid idea, John saw it was not that stupid."

A presentation to investors will be made in due course.

Question on size and digital footprint, in English ... but Levy answers in French. He's talking about his longtime attachment to the French company and its owners.

Wren: "The process (on both sides) was exactly the same with the same emotions ... with the more difficult issues the fact that we were able to get through them the way we did (is a good thing)"? ... Wren talks about trust again. "We're in complete alignment. ... there will be on occasion a couple things we simply can't agree ... we have a process which I won't go into."

Levy: [Talks about digital.] "The reason why size matters in this field is simply bec when you look at these internet giants, billions of people are connected, the classic approach of having some millions ... these numbers are absolutely huge ..."

Wren: "Anything worth having three years from now is going to be digital because the whole marketplace is moving that way ... even billboards these days." Wren mentions that he was one of the first investors in Razorfish in 1996. "I still have a T shirt from that." (Razorfish was later sold to Publicis where it is one of Publicis' biggest assets.)

Question about the diminished role of France in the deal:

Wren: "This building isn't going anywhere. This is the best real estate and it far exceeds anything we have. [Everyone laughs. Levy's office famously has a view of the Arc de Triomphe.] ... I give up my American identity and HQ and become European. ... these are truly global companies. ... the Netherlands was an elegant solution for anyone who would be troubled by that question so we proceeded with that."

Levy says something in French and everyone claps. "Voila!" he says, and the meeting ends.

+++

Adweek notes that if the deal triggers change-in-control provisions at Omnicom, CEO John Wren will receive a payout. He already owns about $70.6 million in stock. Adweek's Noreen O'Leary also describes how the deal will affect the board of Publicis:

?Such a transaction would help Publicis buy the stock of retiring chair Elisabeth Badinter, the daughter of Publicis founder Marcel Bleustein-Blanchet, who has been a member of the holding company?s Supervisory Board since 1987 and its chair since 1996. She is expected to retire from that capacity at the end of 2015. Badinter, 69, is Publicis?s largest shareholder, with 9.13 percent of the company?s stock and 16.57 percent of voting rights. At the company?s current stock price of $59.35, her 19.2 million shares are valued at $1.1 billion. Depending on the terms of the deal, her holding could be halved.

O'Leary also notes that the heads of the major agencies ? such as Publicis' Saatchi & Saatchi and Leo Burnett; and Omnicom's TBWA, DDB and BBDO ? were not told of the merger talks as they were happening.

David Jones, CEO of rival network Havas Worldwide, has questioned the deal, saying it will not be in the best interest of clients because the new behemoth might be more bureaucratic and less nimble.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/live-omnicom-and-publicis-announce-their-merger-in-paris-2013-7

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Sunday, July 28, 2013

West Linn man gathers volunteers to renovate Northeast Portland ...

About 75 people spent West Linn resident Steve Marshall's 50th birthday renovating Kimberely Dixon-McCleary's house in Northeast Portland Sunday.

Marshall and Dixon-McCleary met earlier this month, when Marshall asked a local pastor to connect him with a family in need of help.

Work Party

West Linn resident Steve Marshall is hosting a work party to renovate Kimberely Dixon-McCleary's home in Northeast Portland. The event ends at 4 p.m. Sunday, but donations and services will also be needed later in the week, Marshall said.

Dixon-McCleary, 46, certainly fit the bill, she said. Her 21-year-old son, Andreas Price Jones, died in a gang shooting June 9, and her one-year-old granddaughter also died recently. An investigation into the cause of the granddaughter's death is ongoing, Marshall said.

Marshall, president and co-founder of marketing agency the New Group, decided to dedicate his birthday to Dixon-McCleary's family, lining up businesses to donate services and friends to volunteer their time.

"I'm truly loving every minute of it," said Dixon-McCleary as volunteers painted her house, replaced the plumbing system, fixed a broken skylight and even installed a new basketball hoop for her four children that live at home.

"My son who was killed was a very generous person," she said. "I see a bit of him in everybody that I've come to meet today."

Marshall estimated that businesses and individuals have donated about $30,000 in services, and he still hopes to find people who can donate roofing, kitchen counters, a kitchen sink and insulation.

Dixon-McCleary's own birthday was in June, but she was uninterested in celebrating at the time, she said.

"My heart continues to heal and is still overwhelmingly broken," she said. But "here we are, with unabandoned joy."

"I am able to celebrate," she said.

-- Nicole Friedman

Source: http://www.oregonlive.com/portland/index.ssf/2013/07/west_linn_man_gathers_voluntee.html

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Holiday Inn plans third hotel in Rome

IHG (InterContinental Hotels Group) is planning its third Holiday Inn hotel in Rome, the Holiday Inn Rome ? Pisana.

Holiday Inn Rome ? Pisana is due to open in quarter four of 2013, following a conversion from an existing hotel brand to an IHG branded hotel, and will operate under a franchise agreement with Roma Ovest S.r.l., part of JSH Group.

Featuring 229 bedrooms, two restaurants and an elegant lounge bar, the Holiday Inn Rome ? Pisana is ideal for leisure travellers wanting to relax in a modern welcoming environment.? The hotel?s seven meeting rooms equipped with the latest audio and visual technologies, and the addition of free Wi-Fi throughout the hotel caters to the needs of business travellers frequenting the city of Rome.

IHG?s Director of Development for Italy, Domenico Magnati, said: ?The addition of this hotel to our portfolio of Holiday Inn properties in Rome is in line with our growth strategy for Europe. Our increased presence in this region will not only offer travellers a greater choice of hotels and improved flexibility, but will ensure we continue to anticipate the needs of our guests and respond to market demand.?

The hotel is located halfway between Rome City Centre and Rome Fiumicino Airport allowing easy travel to Rome?s impressive historical sites including the Vatican Museum, St. Peter?s Basilica, Trevi Fountain and the Colosseum.

IHG has 32 hotels (5, 026) rooms open in Italy, with another four in the pipeline that will open in the next three to five years.

The Holiday Inn brand is now the largest hotel brand in the world with over 400,000 rooms in over 100 countries.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/breakingtravelnews/news/~3/qUb70cstjp8/

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EU, China resolve solar dispute - their biggest trade row by far

By Robin Emmott and Ben Blanchard

BRUSSELS/BEIJING (Reuters) - China and the European Union defused their biggest trade dispute by far on Saturday with a deal to regulate Chinese solar panel imports and avoid a wider war in goods from wine to steel.

After six weeks of talks, the EU's trade chief and his Chinese counterpart sealed the deal over the telephone, setting a minimum price for panels from China near spot market prices.

European solar panel makers accuse China of benefitting from huge state subsidies, allowing them to dump about 21 billion euros ($28 billion) worth of below-cost solar panels in Europe last year, putting European firms out of business.

Other European industries that have accused China of dumping have faced imports of about 1 billion euros a year.

Europe planned to impose hefty tariffs from August 6 but, wary of offending China's leaders and losing business in the world's No. 2 economy, a majority of EU governments - led by Germany - opposed the plan, which led to the compromise deal.

"We found an amicable solution," EU Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht said. "I am satisfied with the offer of a price undertaking submitted by China's solar panel exporters," he said, referring to the minimum price for China's imports.

Chinese Commerce Ministry Spokesman Shen Danyang welcomed the deal, hailing a "positive and highly constructive outcome".

An EU diplomatic source said that in the solar agreement, the agreed price was 0.56 euro cents per watt, near the spot price for Chinese solar panels in July in Europe, according to solar exchange pvXchange.

Under the terms of the deal, China will also be allowed to meet about half Europe's solar panel demand, if taken at last year's levels. EU consumption was about 15 gigawatts in 2012, and China will be able to provide 7 gigawatts without being subject to tariffs under the deal, the EU source said.

COURT CHALLENGE

That did not satisfy some EU solar manufacturers who said the minimum import price agreed still constitutes dumping and accused the European Commission of breaking EU law by failing to protect European industry.

European solar panel manufacturer association EU ProSun said it will go to the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg to challenge the deal.

"Even the biggest EU trade conflict ever must still be resolved on the basis of the applicable law," said EU ProSun's president, Milan Nitzschke.

However, China has sold solar panels for as little as 0.38 cents a watt, according to the European Commission, which handles trade issues for EU states, and tariffs would also hurt EU panel installers, who benefit from cheaper Chinese panels.

Chinese manufacturers such as U.S.-listed Trina Solar , Yingli Green Energy and Suntech Power Holdings are among those exporting to Europe.

Chinese solar panel production quadrupled between 2009 and 2011 to more than the world's entire demand as it took advantage of a growing market for renewable energy in the face of concerns about climate change.

But the global financial crisis and ensuing euro zone crisis have forced European governments to withdraw generous subsidies for solar energy. That, along with Chinese imports pushing down prices, have sent many European solar companies into bankruptcy.

German group Conergy filed for insolvency this month.

Still, those concerns have become secondary to the much larger EU-China trade relationship at stake over the panels dispute.

Europe is China's most important trading partner, while for the EU, China is second only to the United States. Chinese exports of goods to the bloc totaled 290 billion euros last year, with 144 billion going the other way.

Responding to the EU's move to impose duties, China launched an anti-dumping inquiry into European wine sales, which may have led to exporters in France, as well as Spain and Italy, being hit with retaliatory duties.

EU and Chinese diplomats now expect that case to be dropped as a goodwill gesture, although officials declined to comment on Saturday.

(Additional reporting by Martin Santa in Brussels; Editing by Louise Ireland)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/eu-says-reaches-deal-china-resolve-solar-dispute-081218734.html

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Friday, July 26, 2013

Forbes magazine forced to apologise for wrongly outing Irish President Michael D Higgins as gay

  • Has since apologised to married father Present Michael D Higgins
  • Article claiming he was an 'acknowledged homosexual' was online for hours
  • Journalist David Monagan said to feel 'horrible' over mistake
  • President Higgins has four children and is married to actress Sabina

By Amanda Williams

|

The President of Ireland has been wrongly 'outed' as gay by a journalist writing for influential financial magazine, Forbes.

The New York-based business bible, famed for its rich list, has now apologised to Present Michael D Higgins for claiming he was an 'acknowledged homosexual' in a piece on its website yesterday.

President Higgins has four children and is married to actress Sabina.

The article - about the US nominee for ambassador to the United Nations, Samantha Power - was written by David Monagan and was online for several hours.

The New York-based business bible, famed for its rich list, has now apologised to Present Michael D Higgins for claiming he was an 'acknowledged homosexual' in a piece on its website yesterday

The New York-based business bible, famed for its rich list, has now apologised to Present Michael D Higgins for claiming he was an 'acknowledged homosexual' in a piece on its website yesterday

The magazine said: 'Both Forbes and the author of the post David Monagan sincerely regret the error. Forbes is issuing an apology to President Higgins in a separate correspondence.

Forbes said the piece which was online for several hours yesterday contained a 'serious error'.

Eamon Gilmore, Ireland's deputy prime minister and a former colleague of President Higgins in the Labour Party, said the fact that the story was pulled speaks for itself.

?

'I understand it was online and it was taken down - I think that tells us everything we need to know about that article,' he said.

'It's probably more a source of embarrassment for the journalist who wrote it than for anyone else.'

Monagan, originally from the US but based in Co Cork, is part of Forbes.com's contributor network.
The article did not go to print.

The article on Ms Power, originally from Ireland, looked back at past presidents of the country.

President Higgins (right) has four children and is married to actress Sabina. He is pictured with his wife Sabina Coyne, Mary McAleese and her husband Martin McAleese in Aran An Uachtarain in the Phoenix Park, Dublin

President Higgins (right) has four children and is married to actress Sabina. He is pictured with his wife Sabina Coyne, Mary McAleese and her husband Martin McAleese in Aran An Uachtarain in the Phoenix Park, Dublin Picture by Joe Dunne 03/11/11

It stated: 'The current president of Ireland, Michael D Higgins, is a poet, acknowledged homosexual and nearly as outspoken as his predecessors.'

Monagan has said the mistake was the biggest error of his professional life.

It is understood a letter is being sent by Forbes senior management in New York to the President's office in Aras an Uachtarain in Dublin.

A spokesman for the President declined to comment on the controversy.

Monagan has been unavailable for comment today but in the hours after the article went live he reportedly said he felt horrible when he realised his mistake.

'I feel horrible. The story is that I made a mistake, for which I apologise from my heart. It was under deadline pressure and is inexcusable,' he said.

Monagan moved to Ireland from Connecticut in 2000 with his family and divides his time between Cork and Waterford.

Forbes, which bills itself as a leading source for reliable business news and financial information, uses fact checkers to substantiate stories after individual freelancers submit work for publication.

Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2377558/Forbes-magazine-forced-apologise-wrongly-outing-Irish-President-Michael-D-Higgins-gay.html?ITO=1490&ns_mchannel=rss&ns_campaign=1490

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Thursday, July 25, 2013

Wrotham Heath Business over Breakfast (BoB Club), Hoilday Inn ...

Error connecting to Apache Tomcat instance.


Please check that a Tomcat server is running at given location and port..
Details:
No connection could be made because the target machine actively refused it 127.0.0.1:8009

You can change this message by changing TomcatConnectErrorURL setting in setting file.

Source: http://www.findnetworkingevents.com/events/index.cfm?action=eventdetail&eventid=60319&utm_source=sitefeeds&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=regionfeed

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