Morning Read

Francois Hollande

Austerity in Doubt, Some MF Global Clients Wait for Dollar One, Buffett Says ‘Peanuts’: Roundup

Austerity plans will be reexamined after elections in France and Greece, though one country is more likely to adopt radical change. Not all MF Global clients were created equal when it comes to recovering funds from the failed derivatives broker. Buffett says his investment in Goldman Sachs was just peanuts. Read about it in today’s Wall Street roundup.

Change of tide? François Hollande defeated Nicolas Sarkozy, as expected, in a runoff election, installing as French president a socialist party leader who has promised to revisit austerity plans negotiated between Mr. Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel. In Greece, voters shifted support away from political mainstays to extreme parties, placing the future of austerity in that country in question. The “bitter reality” of the European economic situation may preclude Mr. Hollande from straying too far from his predecessor’s path.

In Greece, on the other hand, the election results increase chances that the country will exit the euro to 50-75 percent, according to two Citigroup economists, though they say that a broad break-up of the monetary union is unlikely.

Zero Hedge has your guide to Europe for Dummies.

Preferred customers: Some MF Global clients have recovered holdings from the failed broker, while others have yet to see a dollar, the Wall Street Journal reports. The difference: where the clients invested their money. Funds invested in the U.S. have been at repaid 72 percent, but regulatory quirks leave those with money invested overseas waiting to recover funds.

Seeking allies: Reuters digs into the state of affairs at Ally Financial, “one of the least scrutinized bailouts of the financial crisis,” and hears that mortgage-lending unit ResCap may be placed in bankruptcy within the next week. Ally, meanwhile, has been the victim of competing interests internally and lax government oversight. With indications that General Motors and Chrysler are less likely to auto loans to Ally, the Treasury’s 74 percent stake in the company could lose value. Read More

Morning Read

Aubrey McClendon

Round Up: Chesapeake Hedge Fund Exposed, Dewey Deal Falls Through

The more you poke into gas giant Chesapeake CEO, the more foul odor emerges. There’s a sad inevitability to the news that a lifeline to foundering law firm Dewey & LeBouef was withdrawn. It’s a good day for Carlyle’s founders, even if they didn’t get their price and an Obama donor offers a revealing anecdote about how the rich see themselves. Read about it in our morning Wall Street roundup.

Bad gas: From 2004 to 2008, Chesapeake Energy CEO Aubrey McClendon ran a private hedge fund that traded the same commodities that Chesapeake produced, according to Reuters. The $200 million fund listed Chesapeake’s Oklahoma City HQ as its mailing address, and employed an accountant who was also on staff at the natural gas powerhouse. Marketing the fund, we expect, was a breeze.

McClendon addressed media for the first time since he was stripped of his chairmanship, but wouldn’t discuss reported conflicts of interest: “Your mother told you not to believe everything you read or hear for good reason,” he said. Read More

Big Deals

Stake Sale a Big-Time Bellwether on Madison

A stake in Ralph Lauren’s chichi emerald headquarters is up for grabs.

A 49 percent interest in 650 Madison Avenue, a trophy office tower just steps from the GM Building, is about to be put on the market, multiple industry sources told The Observer. The 500,000-square-foot building is valued at around $950 million, a source Read More

Carlyle Group Buys Stake in 666 Fifth Retail for $525 M.

The Carlyle Group closed Tuesday on the purchase of an interest in the retail condo at 666 Fifth Avenue, the tower that Kushner Companies bought last year for a then-record $1.8 billion, according to a source familiar with the deal.

The Carlyle Group—the mammoth private-equity group that manages $82.7 billion in 60 funds worldwide Read More

Hegemonic Carlyle Group Buys Two Small Meatpacking Buildings

There’s something about the West Side of Manhattan that seems fitting for the Carlyle Group. When the buyout firm purchased a parcel of land along Riverside Drive in 2005 with Extell for $1.76 billion it made sense: If a $20 billion Washington firm full of stodgy bankers and investors and former politicians (James Baker and Read More

Be Afraid. Be Very Afraid: Those Spooky Carlyle Rumors

The Iron Triangle: Inside the Secret World of the Carlyle Group , by Dan Briody. John Wiley & Sons, 210 pages, $24.95.

After graduating from law school, I went to work for Stuart Eizenstat, President Carter’s former domestic-policy adviser. Stuart had started a small Washington office of his former Atlanta-based law firm with other Carter-administration Read More