Barclays Still Entertaining Suitors for iShares

Barclays Plc and CVC Capital Partners may have already agreed to a $4.4-billion deal for Barclays’ iShares funds business, but Barclays apparently is still entertaining offers, according to Reuters.

A Reuters news report said the April 9 agreement gave Barclays the right to keep looking for suitors for its iShares business despite the bid from CVC, a private equity firm, until June 18 (see “CVC Capital Partners Wins Barclays iShares Bid’).

Reuters reported comments from a Barclays spokesman that there had been “tremendous” interest in iShares from “both strategic and private equity” since the CVC deal. The Sunday Times newspaper indicated buyout firm BC Partners has lodged a 3.5-billion-pound bid for iShares.

Want the latest retirement plan adviser news and insights? Sign up for PLANADVISER newsletters.

The Daily Telegraph said on its Web site Sunday that Barclays has at least two counteroffers for iShares, with private equity groups Apax, BC Partners, and Hellman & Friedman all looking at trumping the CVC proposal.

The Sunday Times said BC Partners’ move was expected to tempt other suitors into the bidding. The Times said other bidders could include trade rivals such as Charles Schwab as well as other buyout firms, such as Colony Capital, the private equity group.

Workers Find Career Happiness Post-Retirement

A study from the AARP Public Policy Institute found a number of older employees trade income and status for happiness in a late-life career change.

Using data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS), the AARP study tracks a sample of workers age 51 to 55 and employed full-time in 1992 and computes the percentage who changed employers, occupations, or industries by 2006, when they were ages 65 to 69. Forty-three percent changed employers, and 63% of those switched careers, according to the report.

Older workers who have completed college and those who did not complete high school are significantly less likely to change careers than high school graduates who did not attend college. In addition, defined benefit pension coverage significantly reduces the likelihood that older workers change jobs, the report said.

Want the latest retirement plan adviser news and insights? Sign up for PLANADVISER newsletters.

AARP found those who retire and take new jobs are nearly twice as likely to move to a new career as laid-off workers who become re-employed. Older workers who move into new careers, especially those who retire from their former jobs, tend to move into jobs that are less demanding and pay less than their former occupations.

According to the study report, median wages fell by 57% for retirees, 22% for those who were laid off, and 5% for those who quit their former jobs. Nearly a quarter of job changers lose health insurance with their career change, and only about 10% gain insurance.

Almost half said their old job was stressful and their new job is not. Approximately 91% of older career changers said they enjoy going to work, compared to 79% who said so about their old job.

In addition, career changers, especially retirees, are more likely to have flexible schedules in their new positions. About 45% have flexible work arrangements on their new jobs, compared to 27% who did in their old jobs. About one-half moved from full-time work to part-time work.

The full report is availabe here.

«