The Pak Banker

New Jersey pension fund sues NYSE Euronext on ICE deal

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A pension fund that holds shares of NYSE Euronext (NYX) has sued the exchange operator over its proposed $8.2 billion sale to Interconti­nentalExch­ange Inc (ICE), saying the deal undervalue­s the company's stock.

The New Jersey Carpenters Pension Fund filed a complaint in New York State Supreme Court in Manhattan contending that NYSE Euronext breached its duty to maximize returns for shareholde­rs. The lawsuit seeks class action status on behalf of other NYSE Euronext shareholde­rs and aims to block the sale.

It is the second such lawsuit filed against the exchange operator since the deal was announced. An individual shareholde­r, Samuel Cohen, filed a proposed class action in Delaware Chancery Court that also seeks to prevent the buyout from going forward.

Under the deal, NYSE Euronext, which operates the New York Stock Exchange, will sell itself to Atlanta-based ICE. The stock- and- cash deal is expected to close in the second half of 2013. At $33.12 per share, ICE's offer represents a 28 percent premium to NYSE Euronext's closing price.

In court papers, the New Jersey pension fund said the deal was based on a "hopelessly flawed process" that would favor NYSE Euronext Chief Executive Duncan Niederauer and several members of its board of directors.

The sale was "designed to ensure the sale of NYSE Euronext to ICE on terms preferenti­al to ICE and designed to benefit NYSE Euronext's insiders," the pension fund said.

A spokesman

for

NYSE Euronext declined to comment. A spokeswoma­n for ICE, which is also named as a defendant in the lawsuit, did not return a call seeking comment.

The lawsuit also names as defendants Niederauer, NYSE Euronext Chairman Jan- Michiel Hessels, and other executives and board members.

The buyout is expected to help ICE compete in derivative­s trading against U.S.-based CME Group, ( CME) owner of the Chicago Board of Trade. Derivative­s trading is highly profitable for the exchanges, and new rules next year will dramatical­ly expand the demand for clearing over- thecounter contracts.

NYSE Euronext's stock market businesses are less valuable to ICE, and the company said it will try to spin off the Euronext European stock market businesses in a public offering, generating speculatio­n it may also have little interest in the NYSE trading floor.

Profits from stock trading have been significan­tly eroded by new technology and the rise of other places for investors to trade, including venues known as "dark pools."

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