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Former Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Pace heads to private equity

Private equity firm Behrman Capital has announced that General Peter Pace, retired USMC and former Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman, took the role as Operating Partner with the firm. General Pace was also named as Chairman of the Board to Pelican Products, an advanced lighting systems and valuable equipment case manufacturer. He will also direct ILC Industries, Inc., a company that provides defense electronics (of course the defense angle).

Grant Behrman of the firm noted that General Pace has forty years tenure in the Marines and then as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Pace graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy and has an MBA from George Washington University.

Behrman Capital is a private equity investment firm with more than $2 billion of capital under management and it invests in management buyouts, leveraged "buildups" and recapitalizations of established growth companies. If you look through the private equity firm's portfolio companies, you can see why having a former general and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman would be a good thing.

General Motors (GM) launches joint venture in ex-Soviet territory

General Motors Corp. (NYSE: GM) will be joining up with a former Soviet territory to produce and sell Chevy-branded vehicles. GM and Uzavtosanoat (located in Uzbekistan) have signed a partnership agreement for a joint venture that will target consumers in that middle-Asian country. Initially, the joint venture is projected to produce about 250,000 cars annually.

GM continues to invest in emerging markets worldwide to offset sale problems here in its domestic market, and this should be a good move for the auto giant. The ex-Soviet republic had a falling out with the U.S. over a 2005 citizen uprising (and human rights violations en masse) in Andijan, but has warmed back to American business with this rather large partnership.

The GM/Uzbekistan joint partnership will take advantage of a plant that exists in the town of Asaka where Uzavtosanoat already has a factory that recently operated as part of a joint venture with the failed South Korean automaker Daewoo. Ironically, that plant already assembles cars from shipped-in assembly kits supplied by -- GM . well, GM Daewoo Auto & Technology Company, anyway. GM Daewoo is the South Korean unit of the auto giant which happened as a result of GM's buying Daewoo's assets over five years ago.

Ford (F) will seek deeper cuts than General Motors (GM) when UAW comes to town

Although the heated battle this week between the United Autoworkers Union and General Motors Corp. (NYSE: GM) was more than enough distraction for the Detroit automaker, GM finally admitted that it make vehicles -- not health plans -- but it will make nice and compromise anyway. For a company still struggling to return to consistent profitability, it needs to get back to making vehicles.

Competitor Ford Motor Co. (NYSE: F) stated this week that the deal cut with GM may not be enough for it in terms of cost cuts. Ford is in worse financial shape than GM at this time, something very well known to UAW president Ron Gettelfinger. In fact, Gettelfinger stated that the GM deal worked on this week will be a rough template for deals with Ford and the Chrysler group. But, with Ford needing cuts that go deeper than GMs, the template may need major modifications when Ford's time rolls around.

Although reports state Gettelfinger will take Ford's current status into account when both parties sit down at the negotiating table, Ford CEO Alan Mulally will require it. Mulally says that no deal will be accepted by Ford that doesn't make the automaker fully competitive with overseas rivals. Its goal: cut labor costs in the U.S. by 30%. If we think the UAW / GM deal was intense, the feathers will really fly when Ford sits down at the lead chair soon.

Of course, David Cole, chairman of the Center for Automotive Research, said that "The last thing the UAW wants to do is jeopardize the future of Ford ... they'll get some modification that fits the situation." Ford's 2006 annual loss of $12.6 billion will require on heck of a modification to any new agreement, that's for sure.

General Motors (GM) and the UAW set up strike showdown today

General Motors Corp. (NYSE: GM) has the UAW as a thorn in its side once again, as UAW President Ron Gettelfinger has picked a fight with GM about proposed funding for the automaker's retiree health fund. Is this the same old song and dance we've seen before?

UAW officials labeled GM as a "strike target" less than 24 hours after disputing procedures for funding GM's retiree health care fund, and the contract between the union and Detroit's GM ends at midnight tonight. So, there are about 14+ hours left for the two boys in the sandbox to put aside differences and come to a compromise. Place your bets now.

With the big three (or big two, if you're talking public companies) having a combined $114 billion in health care obligations, the fight between auto unions and large domestic automakers will see no end, if ever. But, in recent contract talks, the spirit of the meetings was described as "cooperative talks." Well, until the last minute (like always). Tempers are flaring most likely, and egos are dropping bombs all over the meeting room floor (maybe even f-bombs, heh).

But with the three largest domestic automakers losing a combined $15 billion in 2006, the UAW relented in its fight to get them agreeing on paying for all health care costs for all employees, active and retired. Looks like that "you all pay for everything" stance is back in some form. GM does not need employees walking out to picket at this point in 2007, but that is possibly what could happen over the weekend based on what happens in Detroit today.

Daily Option Update - January 26, 2007

Volatility Index S&P 500 Options-VIX up 1.19 to 11.16.

Microsoft Corp's. (NASDAQ: MSFT) February option implied volatility collapsed to 19 after record Q2 revenue of $12.54 billion. Microsoft reported Q2 EPS of 26 cents versus consensus estimates of 23 cents. Q2 revenue rose 6%. Microsoft launches Vista, Office 2007 and exchange Server 2007 on 1/30. Goldman Sachs says "good second quarter and stronger growth ahead." Microsoft February option implied volatility of 17 is below its 26-week average of 22 according to Track Data, suggesting decreasing price risk.

General Motors' (NYSE: GM) implied volatility was low at 34 going into the financial delay on its restatement. General Motors will delay its Q4 and full year earnings report, which was expected to be released next week, to again restate financial results. Citigroup has a $24 price target on General Motors. General Motors' overall option implied volatility of 34 is below its 26-week average of 42, according to Track Data, suggesting decreasing price fluctuations.

Option volume leaders today were: Amgen (NASDAQ: AMGN), Apple Computer (NASDAQ: AAPL), Nokia (NYSE: NOK), Microsoft and eBay (NASDAQ: EBAY).

Note: The Daily Option Update is provided by Options Specialist Paul Foster of theflyonthewall.com.


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