Saturday, March 31, 2012

Angels add Isringhausen to roster

TEMPE, Ariz. -- Jason Isringhausen has made the Los Angeles Angels’ roster and is set for his 16th major league season.

The Angels selected the contract of the 39-year-old former Mets reliever from Triple-A Salt Lake on Friday and optioned outfielder Mike Trout to the minor league team.

Isringhausen gets a $650,000, one-year contract and the chance to earn $200,000 in performance bonuses: $50,000 each for 25, 35, 45 and 55 games.

“Right now there’s no doubt that there’s a role for him in the major leagues and with our staff,” Angels manager Mike Scioscia said. “He’s an important addition to our bullpen.”

Isringhausen was 3-3 with a 4.05 ERA and seven saves in 53 games with the Mets last year. He signed with the Angels, hoping to play for a contender.

Isringhausen said he would have retired had the Angels not signed him.

“We’re going to slot him to wherever he can get,” Scioscia said. “We’re all projecting that he can get a lot closer to how he threw the ball last year than where he was” early in camp.

Isringhausen retired the side in order in one inning Thursday against Kansas City. He has a 6.35 ERA in 5 2-3 spring training innings.

Trout’s spring training was set back because of flu that caused him to drop nearly 15 pounds.

He made the jump from Double-A Arkansas last season to the Angels and hit .220 in 40 games.

Jason Isringhausen, Los Angeles Angels, Angels, Angels manager Mike Scioscia, Mike Trout, the Angels, Triple-A Salt Lake, major league

Nypost.com

Mobile tech big to lead PayPal

EBay Inc. named mobile technology entrepreneur David Marcus president of its PayPal unit yesterday, replacing Scott Thompson, who left in January to become chief executive of Yahoo!

The appointment shows the importance of PayPal’s push into mobile payments globally and its efforts to process transactions in physical stores, not just online.

Marcus, a native of France, who turns 39 on April 12, said he plans to stick to the strategy Thompson and other top PayPal executives set in recent years.

PayPal’s top priorities are developing “products and consumer experiences” that change the way people pay around the world, Marcus said.

John Donahoe, eBay’s chief executive, said PayPal is at an important “inflexion point” because it is moving into offline payments.

PayPal is eBay’s most valuable business, so analysts and investors had been watching closely to see who would replace Thompson.

EBay shares slipped 0.7 percent to $36.99 in trading on Nasdaq.

Reuters

Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click For Restrictions

Scott Thompson, Thompson, PayPal, chief executive, EBay Inc., David Marcus, Marcus said.John Donahoe, Yahoo!

Nypost.com

Yonkers Results

FIRST-mile; pace; $8,500; claim

4

FoxVlleyEscort(TButr)

7.40

3.60

3.00

3

Shark Shuffle (J Bartlett)

3.50

2.50

2

Rolled Up Aces (J Stratton)

3.20

* Exacta (4-3) $26.20 * Triple (4-3-2) $74.50

SECOND-mile; trot; $12,000; claim

5

Ima Spur (J Gregory)

2.70

2.20

2.10

4

Howmacs Amigo (T Buter)

4.80

3.20

1

Distinct Victory (J Stratton)

5.10

* Exacta (5-4) $11.60 * Triple (5-4-1) $81.00 * Daily double (4/5) $19.20
Exacta picked by Smith

THIRD-mile; pace; $8,500; claim

7

MovngArt(JBongorn)

41.80

14.60

9.40

4

Bambna'sSorella(JBartlett)

5.00

3.60

8

Britash Redcoat (L Stalbaum)

7.80

* Exacta (7-4) $215.00 * Triple (7-4-8) $2,300.00 * Superfecta (7-4-8-1) $34,403.00

FOURTH-mile; pace; $8,500; claim

4

DlghtfulSyd(BHollnd)

4.30

2.80

2.30

2

SkywayHanover(LStalbum)

3.00

2.30

5

Our New Treasure (J Bartlett)

4.60

* Exacta (4-2) $9.10 * Triple (4-2-5) $50.00 * Pick 3 (5/7/4) $207.00

FIFTH-mile; pace; $11,000; cond

1

Dinah Ross (JBartlett)

4.10

2.80

2.20

4

Princess Bliss (T Buter)

3.40

2.80

3

Look Siera (D Dube)

3.20

* Exacta (1-4) $13.00 * Triple (1-4-3) $39.60 * Superfecta (1-4-3-8) $328.50Scr: P H Dreamer.

Exacta picked by Smith
SIXTH-mile; pace; $12,000; claim

3

Prestssmo(LStalbum)

12.40

7.70

3.50

6

S F Decathlon (G Brennan)

8.70

3.30

2

Real Mystical (C Manzi)

2.10

* Exacta (3-6) $88.00 * Triple (3-6-2) $309.00 * Pick 4 (7/4/1,6/3) $1,921.00
Winner picked by Smith

SEVENTH-mile; pace; $12,000; claim

3

TrckMyDesr(LStlbum)

7.00

3.70

2.80

4

Spudcam (G Brennan)

2.30

2.30

5

Onthewngsofnangel(MMacDonld)

4.80

* Exacta (3-4) $19.40 * Triple (3-4-5) $103.00 * Pick 3 (1/3/3) $187.00

EIGHTH-mile; pace; 14,000; claim

4

WnterRetrtA(GBrnnn)

3.20

2.50

2.10

7

Mcgreat (J Bartlett)

6.90

4.60

1

Oyster Bay (E Goodell)

3.20

* Exacta (4-7) $36.00 * Triple (4-7-1) $150.50 * Superfecta (4-7-1-3) $514.00

NINTH-mile; pace; $14,000; claim

4

Myflwrmnshn(CMnz)

36.00

13.20

6.60

3

Space Walk (J Pantaleano)

12.20

7.30

2

Goose Creek (E Goodell)

6.70

* Exacta (4-3) $248.50 * Triple (4-3-2) $1,273.00

TENTH-mile; trot; $14,000; cond

1

Yozhik (D Dube)

8.70

3.80

3.60

6

Wheels (R Schnittker)

4.80

4.10

5

Columbia County (T Buter)

5.00

* Exacta (1-6) $49.80 * Triple (1-6-5) $253.50 * Superfecta (1-6-5-7) $2,377.00 * Pick 3 (4/4/1) $195.00 * Pick 4 (3/4/4/1) $628.00Scr: My Cool Breeze.

ELEVENTH-mile; pace; $14,000; cond

6

BestBusnss(JStrtton)

34.40

11.80

8.90

7

Cmybest (J Bartlett)

4.20

2.80

2

Saymynamesaymynme(GBrennn)

2.70

* Exacta (6-7) $194.50 * Triple (6-7-2) $931.00 * Superfecta (6-7-2-1) $2,068.00 * Late double (1/6) $468.50

Attendance: unavailable
Total Handle: $866,690

J Bartlett, J Bartlett, J Bartlett, J Stratton, J Gregory, pace, G Brennan, D Dube

Nypost.com

Friday, March 30, 2012

Steadier home prices in January

Home prices in 20 cities dropped at a slower pace in January, pointing to stabilization in the real estate market.

The S&P/Case-Shiller index of property values in 20 cities fell 3.8 percent from a year earlier, after decreasing 4.1 percent in December.

Prices were little changed in January from the prior month.

Property values are steadying as a strengthening labor market underpins housing demand, which may allow the industry that precipitated the recession to contribute to growth this year. Nonetheless, the recovery in sales may be restrained by foreclosures that are putting more properties onto the market.

“We are starting to see a slightly less-negative picture,” said Sean Incremona, a senior economist at 4Cast in New York, who correctly projected the decline.

Sixteen of the 20 cities in the index showed a year-over-year decline, led by a 15 percent drop in Atlanta.

Eight cities made new post-slump lows, the report said, including Chicago, Las Vegas and New York.

property values ebook download, real estate, stabilization, Sean Incremona

Nypost.com

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Behind Dodgers Deal: TV Riches

The record-setting $2.15 billion sale of the Los Angeles Dodgers to a group led by former basketball star Earvin "Magic" Johnson and financier Mark Walter dropped the jaws of even the most bullish sports-industry veterans.

In an industry where the usual multiple is about three times annual revenue, the team sold for about 7.3 times its high-water mark of $293 million in revenue, set in 2008.

But with its lucrative media rights coming free from contract after the 2013 season, the new owners have a rich opportunity to either launch a regional sports network in the country's second largest market or to hold an auction for the rights to telecast Dodgers games in a golden era for sports deals.

New owners are willing to spend $2.15 billion on the Dodgers. So just how the heck are they going to make this expensive purchase a profitable enterprise? Matt Futterman discusses on The News Hub.

More

Jamie McCourt's Share: Baseball's Worst Deal?

Who Are the Dodgers' New Owners?

Daily Fix: How the News Spread on Twitter

Daily Fix: Magic Trick - Johnson Snags the Dodgers

Daily Fix: Steinbrenner--'Certainly a Big Price'

Earlier: $2 Billion Price Tag Shatters Records

Photos: Memorable Dodgers Owners

"If you realize it's not a baseball deal first but rather a television and entertainment deal that also comes with a real-estate opportunity, then you can begin to scratch your way back toward justifying the price," said David Carter, director of the Sports Business Institute at the University of Southern California.

In an interview Wednesday, the Dodgers' new owners said that they expect to close their deal with the current owner Frank McCourt by May 1 and that the intense interest in the team justified the price.

The greater Los Angeles television market is just under five million homes, but its outlying areas boost that figure to more than seven million. One of baseball's oldest franchises, the Dodgers have won six World Series, including one in Brooklyn, their original home, where they remain legendary.

"The Dodgers are one of the world's most storied franchises, and the opportunity to be the custodian and help build it in my view was a once in a lifetime opportunity," said Mr. Walter, chief executive of Guggenheim Partners, a fund that is making a significant investment in the team.

Mr. Johnson said he would work to enhance the "community ties and involvement. I will have an office there and will be there every day." Another investor, veteran sports executive Stan Kasten, will oversee the team's baseball operations.

Buying and Selling the Dodgers

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Rogers Photo Archive/Getty Images

Among the Dodgers' former owners: Brooklyn attorney Walter O'Malley—at center here in the 1950s with Dodgers manager Walt Alston, left, and shortstop Pee Wee Reese.

But the most important task will fall to the person the team selects to oversee its media venture, which is where the investors' greatest opportunity to make money lies.

During the next six to 12 months the Dodgers' owners will select one of two lucrative alternatives to pursue at a time when marquee live-sports events have become increasingly valuable.

The simplest move would be to sell their local TV rights to an existing regional sports network. The Dodgers would be entering the market at the perfect time. News Corp.'s Fox unit is trying to stave off a challenge from the new regional sports network that Time Warner Cable plans to launch next year. Dodgers telecasts form the backbone of Fox's Prime Ticket, which would lose substantial value without the team's games. Fox declined to comment. News Corp. also owns The Wall Street Journal.

Recent rights deals for the Los Angeles Angels and Texas Rangers are valued at nearly $150 million a year, including equity in the sports networks. As the top baseball brand in such a large market, the Dodgers would likely command more than that, Lee Berke, a sports media consultant, said.

The other alternative would be for the Dodgers to launch their own network as the New York Yankees did with YES and the New York Mets did with SNY. These networks have become cash cows for team owners because of the monthly fees cable operators pay on behalf of all of their basic subscribers.

WSJ's Matt Futterman breaks down the deal that awarded the Los Angeles Dodgers to a group of investors led by basketball legend Magic Johnson. Photo: GABRIEL BOUYS/AFP/Getty Images

Analysts say a Dodgers network could command a monthly fee of about $3.50 per home beginning in 2014 and reach a market that could stretch as far east as Las Vegas and north to San Luis Obispo.

That could translate into nearly $300 million in revenue annually before the network sells a single ad spot. Another bonus: Proceeds from regional sports networks aren't subject to baseball's revenue-sharing rules, which seek to maintain competitive balance among the MLB's 30 teams.

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Cable operators would have to agree to carry the channel, whose high price might require them to raise rates for customers. In some markets, such price rises have resulted in ugly fights between station owners and service providers. Some of these networks have failed because cable operators refused to carry them and consumers didn't demand them.

To mitigate the risk, some teams have provided equity in the networks to the major cable operators. The Mets own about 65% of SNY, and cable distributors Comcast Corp. and Time Warner Cable own the rest.

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Getty Images

Mr. Johnson said he would work to enhance the 'community ties and involvement. I will have an office there and will be there every day.'

Of course, there is a chance the investors have overpaid. Even if the network gets off the ground, a sports team needs to perform well on the field to sell tickets and attract viewers and corporate sponsors. Losing bids were at least 25% less than the winning offer, suggesting that the competitors took a less bullish view on the team's financial potential than the Johnson-Walter group did.

The Dodgers have a payroll of just over $100 million, which will likely have to rise if the team is to return to excellence. The Dodgers had a win-loss record of 82-79 last year and finished third in the National League's West division.

Opened in 1962, Dodger Stadium is the third oldest in the Major Leagues, and it will require an estimated $200 million renovation if the Dodgers want to offer the luxury seating and other amenities that have become customary at ballparks.

With an average ticket price of $30.59, the seventh highest in the major Leagues in 2011, it may not be an option for the new owners to raise prices quickly. Attendance last year fell 18% from a year earlier to 2.9 million.

Write to Matthew Futterman at matthew.futterman@wsj.com

A version of this article appeared Mar. 29, 2012, on page A1 in some U.S. editions of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Behind Dodgers Deal: TV Riches.
Online.wsj.com

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

The Post Line

NCAA Basketball Tournament

Saturday

Final Four

At New Orleans

Favorite

Line

Underdog

Kentucky

8 1/2

Louisville

Ohio St.

2 1/2

Kansas

Tonight

CBI Tournament

Championship-Game 2

PITTSBURGH

10

Washington St.

College Insider Tournament

Championship

UTAH ST.

5

Mercer

NBA

Favorite

Line

Underdog

KNICKS

Pick

Magic

Pacers

5 1/2

NETS

T’Wolves

6

BOBCATS

Nuggets

5

RAPTORS

CAVALIERS

3

Pistons

CELTICS

4

Jazz

Bulls

3

HAWKS

Spurs

3

KINGS

WARRIORS

4

Hornets

CLIPPERS

6

Suns

NHL

Favorite

Line

Underdog

Rangers

$110-130

JETS

Red Wings

$180-220

B. JACKETS

Kings

$100-120

FLAMES

Stars

$100-120

OILERS

CANUCKS

$150-170

Avalanche

Sharks

$100-120

DUCKS

St.College Insider, NCAA Basketball TournamentSaturdayFinal

Nypost.com

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Mystery Deepens Over Briton in China

As facts trickle in surrounding the death of Neil Heywood, a British man whose death in China sparked a scandal, the WSJ's Deborah Kan speaks to Beijing reporter Jeremy Page about who exactly the businessman who died in Chongqing was.

BEIJING—The British businessman whose death has emerged as a key element in China's biggest political scandal in two decades periodically consulted for a British strategic-intelligence firm founded by ex-spies, a spokesman said Monday.

Neil Heywood, who was found dead in a Chongqing hotel room in November, wasn't a full-time employee of the firm, Hakluyt & Co., and wasn't involved in projects in Chongqing, the spokesman said. The work was apparently one of several jobs Mr. Heywood held. The level of sensitivity of his projects wasn't clear.

The revelation adds a layer of intrigue to the scandal, which increasingly appears to mix the worlds of international diplomacy and corporate sleuthing with China's shadowy domestic security apparatus and opaque politics.

Mr. Heywood's death is one of the events in the drama surrounding the fall of the Communist Party chief in Chongqing, Bo Xilai, whose dismissal this month has thrown Chinese politics into turmoil.

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CBRITON

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Associated Press

A U.K. businessman's death has added to mystery around Bo Xilai.

Read More

Heywood's Ties Highlight Secretive Sector

China Real Time: Revolutionary TV Station to Resume Regular Programming

U.K. Seeks Probe Into China Death (3/25/2012)

China Reins In Bo Xilai Chatter Online (3/22/2012)

Beijing Tightens Grip After Purge (3/21/2012)

Opinion: The Fall of Bo Xilai(3/16/2012)

Full Coverage: Bo Xilai

Suspicions about Mr. Heywood's death were raised by Wang Lijun, the former Chongqing police chief who triggered the political drama, The Wall Street Journal reported Sunday. Mr. Wang, who sought refuge from Mr. Bo in the U.S. Consulate in Chengdu on Feb. 6, claimed to have fallen out with Mr. Bo after discussing with him his belief that Mr. Heywood was poisoned, according to people familiar with the matter. He also claimed Mr. Heywood had been involved in a business dispute involving Mr. Bo's wife, Gu Kailai, according to one of those people.

The British government said Sunday it had asked China's central government to investigate the case fully in light of fresh suspicions about Mr. Heywood's death, and that Chinese officials promised to "take it forward."

The new revelation about Mr. Heywood's work with Hakluyt suggests he might have been engaged in activities that are considered highly sensitive—and sometimes dangerous—in China.

Gathering business intelligence and investigating Chinese firms is a growing industry here, and inevitably those engaged in it often delve into issues of corruption, nepotism and vested bureaucratic interests.

News on Mr. Heywood and his connections to the Bo family has been eagerly devoured by a Chinese public that knows little about the personal lives of its top leaders. At the same time, there has been spreading disquiet as details in the Bo case add to the sense of a drama spinning beyond control. The nervousness is heightened by absence of news on the whereabouts of Mr. Bo and his family.

The addition of a foreigner—a well-mannered Englishman with a politically connected Chinese wife—to the Bo story has added spice to the rumor mill.

A company that used the services of a British businessman, whose death is a key element of a political scandal in China, operated in the secretive industry of business-intelligence. WSJ's Cassell Bryan-Low delves into the world of spies. Photo: Reuters

On Monday, a spokesman for China's Foreign Ministry and local Chongqing officials said they were unaware of the situation regarding Mr. Heywood. The lack of a clear, consistent line from official media and spokespeople in China usually indicates lower-level officials are waiting for the party leadership to make a collective decision about how to handle a given situation, according to political analysts.

A spokesman for Hakluyt said Mr. Heywood had been providing the company with services on a case-by-case basis for some time, without specifying exactly how long. Hakluyt was founded by former officers with the British intelligence service MI6.

A new twist emerges in the Bo Xilai drama as suspicions grow about the death last year of a British businessman in the city of Chongqing. The WSJ's Deborah Kan speaks to Beijing Bureau Chief Andy Browne.

"Neil had a long history of advising Western companies on China and we were among those who sought his advice," the spokesman said. "We're greatly saddened by his death." He declined to say what services Mr. Heywood provided. The firm offers business intelligence and advice as well as credit checks and other due-diligence services.

Several acquaintances and former colleagues of Mr. Heywood said they weren't aware of what exactly he had been doing in Chongqing in November. But people familiar with the case said his Chinese wife wasn't in Chongqing at the time, according to people familiar with the case.

People who knew Mr. Heywood described him as a well-spoken man in his late 40s or early 50s, often clad in a cream linen jacket and tie, who had lived in China for many years and was known in the business community as a part-time dealer of Aston Martin sports cars.

Timeline: The Chongqing Drama

View Interactive

The mysterious death of Neil Heywood in Chongqing last year is emerging as a key element in the drama surrounding Bo Xilai, who was sacked as Chongqing's Communist Party chief this month.

They say that Mr. Heywood, a Mandarin speaker, also was known as a freelance consultant who could help to arrange meetings and solve business problems thanks in large part to a connection with the Bo family established through his wife, who was from the northeastern city of Dalian, where Mr. Bo was mayor from 1993 to 2001.

Two people who knew Mr. Heywood said they thought he had played a role in helping to look after Mr. Bo's son, Bo Guagua, when he was studying at two British private boarding schools—Papplewick and Harrow—and at Oxford University. Two others described him as a "low-level fixer" for the Bo family, suggesting he acted as a middleman for them, helping to arrange meetings with business figures and to advise them on dealing with foreigners.

Many analysts and people close to the party elite believe there is a split in the top leadership between those who support Mr. Bo and want him to remain on the party's Politburo—its top 25 leaders—and those who want him to be ejected and face official punishment.

According to diplomats and other people familiar with the matter, Mr. Wang, the former police chief, asked for political asylum in the U.S. consulate in Chengdu and presented what he said was documentary evidence involving Mr. Bo. He was rejected because U.S. officials feared accepting him would severely damage relations with China. He was persuaded to hand himself over to Chinese central-government officials who took him to Beijing.

It is impossible to substantiate Mr. Wang's allegations or to ascertain the reasons he decided to come forward, and people familiar with the matter said he may be acting in self-interest. Nonetheless, his claims could now be used by Mr. Bo's opponents against him and other leaders who support him.

Efforts to reach Mr. Bo, his wife, Mr. Wang and Mr. Heywood's family were unsuccessful.

Players in China's Leadership Purge

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Associated Press

In this Oct. 21, 2008, photo, then-Chongqing city police chief Wang Lijun held a press conference. Wang triggered the political drama by seeking refuge from Mr. Bo in a U.S. consulate in Chengdu.

Mr. Wang's case is raising interest in Congress, as leading lawmakers are seeking to find out if the Obama administration denied him political asylum.

House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairwoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R., Fla.) is requesting access to State Department communications concerning Mr. Wang's case. A spokesman for Mrs. Ros-Lehtinen said she has yet to receive a response.

The State Department said last month Mr. Wang left the Chengdu consulate under his "own volition." Spokeswoman Victoria Nuland Monday declined to comment further.

One key question in the evolving drama is what exactly Mr. Heywood was doing in Chongqing when he died, and what, if any, projects he had been working on there in the recent past. But several friends, acquaintances and former colleagues said they didn't know.

After he was found dead in his Chongqing hotel room in November, local authorities swiftly declared that he died of "excessive alcohol consumption," and cremated the body without an autopsy, according to people familiar with the matter. Friends have since raised suspicions with the British Embassy, pointing out that he didn't drink.

The website for HL Consulting, a Chinese consultancy that also specializes in credit and other due-diligence checks on Chinese companies, said Mr. Heywood had worked as a nonexecutive director for the firm's IPO advisory team.

The website described Mr. Heywood as a graduate of Beijing Language and Culture University, a "famous expert" on China's economy, a long-term specialist on large Western pension funds, who had played a role in several business ventures with foreign companies, including Zhejiang Geely Holding Group Co.'s takeover of Volvo. Volvo didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

One person recalled Mr. Heywood introducing himself at a social event at the British Embassy in Beijing two years ago as an adviser to the city's Aston Martin dealership.

"He was clearly from a good family, in his late 40s or 50s, and was typical British, yet quite old school," the person said.

—Jay Solomon, Laurie Burkitt and Kersten Zhang contributed to this article.

Write to Jeremy Page at jeremy.page@wsj.com

A version of this article appeared Mar. 27, 2012, on page A1 in some U.S. editions of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Mystery Deepens In Death OfBriton In China.
Online.wsj.com