Word: temco
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Washington's first big salvo against conglomerate corporations came only last month. It was fired by the Justice Department, which announced plans for an antitrust suit to divest Ling-Temco-Vought of its controlling interest in Jones & Laughlin Steel. Last week, "multimarket" companies, as they prefer to be called, quavered again as the Federal Trade Commission took aim at a merger by another big concern, Los Angeles-based Litton Industries...
...only a matter of time before Government trustbusters stopped talking about cracking down on conglomerates and actually did something. After repeated warnings, the Justice Department last week singled out one of the largest of those multi-industry companies, Ling-Temco-Vought, as its first major target. The trustbusters announced that by mid-April they intend to file suit to force LTV to dispose of its 63% holding in Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp...
...these acquisitive companies with a view toward eliminating the tax advantages that help them to make mergers (TIME, Feb. 21). A growing number of Wall Street analysts are beginning to suspect that many conglomerates have been overpriced. One of the most controversial conglomerates of all is debt-ridden Ling-Temco-Vought, which plans to reduce its controlling interest in Braniff Airlines from 67% to 55% and sell off some other assets, including all of its holdings in National Car Rental. L.T.V.'s stock declined last week by 81 points, to a 1968-69 low of 741, and the shares...
...Green, vice president of the $351 million Channing Growth Fund. Channing ranked high in 1967, when it grew 47%; last year, with a growth of 2.6%, it was 296th. Like the Manhattan Fund and many other big funds, Channing was heavily invested in the more seasoned glamour stocks-Ling-Temco-Vought, Fairchild Camera, Polaroid-that declined during the stock slump before Lyndon Johnson's March 31 renunciation, and have been slow to recover. Big funds cannot move out of such stocks quickly without upsetting the market; but smaller funds can-and they did. In a highly selective market, says...
...into income-producing U.S. real estate. Moreover, the fund sells its shares only outside the U.S. to non-U.S. citizens in order to avoid supervision by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Last week the fund's realty holdings passed the $100 million mark as it bought Ling-Temco-Vought's 32-story headquarters building in downtown Dallas for $16.5 million. L.T.V. will lease the space it already occupies, and the fund will add a landlord's profits to those already generated by 33 other properties in eleven states and Puerto Rico. Though still small as mutual...