DealZone

Simon takes fresh tack in bidding battle for bankrupt GGP

Simon Property says it is teaming up with hedge fund Paulson to try to unseat Brookfield Asset Management as the key investor in General Growth Properties as the mall operator angles toward an exit from its bankruptcy.

Simon said it and Paulson would invest $2.5 billion to help General Growth exit bankruptcy, and more importantly, make the investment without taking any warrants to buy shares like Brookfield and other investors have under its current plan, Paritosh Bansal reports.

Paulson, the $32 billion hedge fund run by billionaire investor John Paulson, has made a commitment to co-invest $1 billion with Simon. Sources told us earlier this week that Simon was looking at ways to revise its offer for GGP, which was seen getting hung up on anti-trust concerns.

GGP filed for bankruptcy protection nearly a year ago. It has submitted a proposal to emerge from bankruptcy court backed by three large investors. Under that plan, General Growth would emerge as an independent company. It set an April 22 deadline for objections to the plan.

Paulson’s money goes up against Pershing Square Capital Management and investment manager Fairholme Capital Management, which committed about $3.9 billion at $15 per share to General Growth. General Growth would give these investors warrants for 60 million shares in return for their equity commitment.

Long fight for Extended Stay

Extended Stay

Looks like investors bidding for bankruptcy hotel chain Extended Stay will need a late checkout. Its owners appear to be back to favoring a bid by Centerbridge Partners and Paulson & Co that just got sweeter.

The investors increased their bid for the chain, topping a rival offer led by the Starwood Group, which unseated them in the first place.

But the group’s latest offer may not be the last word on the future of the bankrupt company. A source told Reuters the situation could change again, as an auction for the hotel chain will be held in May.

Bank dealmaking circus=recruiting bait?

Some in the financial industry apparently smell opportunity in the latest round of mergers and blood-letting among top banks.

Referring to the Wells Fargo takeover of Wachovia as the WWF and placing Bank of America CEO Ken Lewis atop a bucking Merrill Lynch bull are just a couple of the attention-getting devices financial sector recruiting firm RJ & Makay uses in its latest promotional You Tube video.

Branching out from a previous video aimed at Merrill Lynch brokers, the new “Billion Dollar Video” (the company claims assets from advisers brought to them via these viral recruiting tools represent billions of dollars) targets all financial advisers but specifically appeals to those currently at Merrill Lynch and Wachovia.

The Big Picture asks the Big Questions of Paulson, Bernanke

Paulson and Bernanke arrive to testify at a hearing of the Senate Banking Committee hearing in WashingtonFinancial blogger Barry Ritzholtz of The Big Picture has some questions for Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke ahead of their appearance on Capitol Hill on Tuesday, starting with a biggie:

You two gentlemen have been wrong about the Housing crisis, missed the leverage problem, and understated the derivative issue. Recall the overuse of the word “Contained.” Indeed, you two have been wrong about nearly everything financially related since this crisis began years ago. Question: Why should we trust your judgment on the largest bailout in American history?

There are 13 more in that vein, plus a “bonus comedy question” — or at least what would have been comedic if the leading lights of American capitalism were not carrying out an unprecedented governmental intervention in the free market: