Friday, June 28, 2013

Reuters: Small Business News: Restaurant chain Noodles & Co shares double in debut

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Restaurant chain Noodles & Co shares double in debut
Jun 28th 2013, 20:35

By Neha Dimri

Fri Jun 28, 2013 4:35pm EDT

(Reuters) - Shares of fast casual restaurant chain operator Noodles & Co (NDLS.O) more than doubled in their market debut, valuing the company known for its Pad Thai and Mac & Cheese dishes at as much as $1.07 billion.

Noodles shares were up nearly 96 percent at $35.20 in late morning trading on the Nasdaq on Friday. They rose as much as 121 percent to $39.70, and ended the day at $36.75.

The initial public offering, the first from any restaurant this year, was a blockbuster despite a volatile market that has led several companies to cut the size of their IPOs or scrap them altogether.

"The whole sector has done well last year and it is growing incredibly," said Francis Gaskins, a partner at IPO research company IPODesktop.com, told Reuters.

Restaurant stocks that have gone public in the last year have done well. Outback steakhouse operator Bloomin' Brands Inc (BLMN.O)'s stock has more than doubled since its debut last August.

Chuy's Tex Mex restaurant operator Chuy's Holdings Inc (CHUY.O) stock has tripled in value, while Steakhouse operator Del Frisco's Restaurant Group Inc (DFRG.O) has risen 67 percent since their debut in July 2012.

Noodles, which advertises under the slogan "A world of flavors under one roof," said its revenue jumped about 76 percent to $300 million between 2008 and 2012. Net income from operations grew seven-fold to $16 million. The company's long-term debt stood at $93.7 million, as of January.

"It has good visible top line growth and investors are starved for that kind of growth which is profitable," Gaskins said.

The Broomfield, Colorado-based restaurant operator, known for its signature dish Truffle Mac or "fancy pants," is looking to tap growing fast food demand among young diners.

Noodles, founded in 1995, is headed by Kevin Reddy, former chief operating officer of burrito chain Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc (CMG.N).

The company owns and operates 343 restaurants, including 52 under franchise arrangements, in 26 states and the District of Columbia, according to its latest filing.

Private equity firm Catterton Partners would hold about 36.7 percent of Noodles after the IPO.

Noodles raised $97.2 million by selling 5.4 million class A shares at $18 per share, above the top end of its increased price range of $15 to $17 per share.

The company, which plans to use the proceeds for working capital, debt repayment and for corporate purposes, listed Morgan Stanley and UBS Securities as lead underwriters to its offering.

(Reporting By Neha Dimri in Bangalore; Editing by Sreejiraj Eluvangal and Joyjeet Das)

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Thursday, June 27, 2013

Reuters: Small Business News: Payment provider Square scraps gift card service

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Payment provider Square scraps gift card service
Jun 27th 2013, 21:56

SAN FRANCISCO | Thu Jun 27, 2013 5:17pm EDT

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Payment start-up Square Inc scrapped its gift card service less than a year after the payments start-up launched the effort.

"Square gift cards were a fun way to send gifts from local businesses to anyone over the holiday season," a Square spokesman said. "They are no longer available for purchase."

Square, which competes against eBay Inc's PayPal division, launched the gift card service in December, letting people buy gift cards for friends or family at businesses that accepted the company's Square Wallet mobile payment application.

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Reuters: Small Business News: Square's website for small businesses takes on e-commerce giants

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Square's website for small businesses takes on e-commerce giants
Jun 27th 2013, 18:06

By Gerry Shih

SAN FRANCISCO | Thu Jun 27, 2013 2:06pm EDT

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Since 2010, Square Inc's matchbox-sized card readers have steadily supplanted credit card machines in coffee shops and corner stores across the United States.

Now, the company, one of Silicon Valley's most highly valued private firms, is diving into a market as expansive the internet itself.

Square launched a shopping website this week called Square Market to serve as an online storefront and payment processor for small businesses, a move that pits the closely held company, valued at $3.25 billion, against popular e-commerce destinations such as eBay Inc, Amazon.com Inc and Etsy.

After spending years tackling offline transactions with his card reader and in-store software package, Square founder Jack Dorsey sees his online market as the company's capstone product. Mom-and-pop retailers that use Square to accept credit cards and digitally manage inventory can now take their business online as well, he said.

"We want to make every commercial transaction easier," Dorsey told Reuters. "What you're seeing here is the completion of that picture."

Square, which makes money by taking a 2.75 percent cut of every payment it processes, has raised the competitive ante, especially with eBay, the Web bazaar whose PayPal subsidiary is one of the dominant online payment operators.

However, there are countless other competitors in an U.S. online retail market, which is expected to reach $278.9 billion by 2015, according to Forrester Research.

Dorsey conceded that Square Market would be dwarfed by e-commerce companies such eBay and Amazon, at least initially. But in an age of Facebook Inc and Twitter, Square's merchants can now reach millions.

"I don't know if a buyer is thinking: "Should I go to Ebay, or should I go to Etsy, or Square?" Dorsey said. "In the end, it's about what the merchant is selling. If you can present excitement around an item, and that item goes viral, it becomes huge."

Dorsey, the 36-year old entrepreneur who invented Twitter in 2006, wants to seamlessly integrate Square Market with Twitter, Facebook and Pinterest. Because Square keeps credit card information on file, a shopper who clicks on a tweet that links to a Square Market product needs only to click once more to purchase the item.

Merchants who use Square's iPad software to process payments and track sales can quickly upload their inventory for free to a Web page, which automatically displays the products in a grid format.

"Flip a switch and suddenly you're online," Dorsey said.

Unlike Amazon, which was launched in 1995 as a humble bookseller, Square's catalog is decidedly urban-chic. Merchants that have participated so far include a few dozen fashion boutiques, an indie rock band, a bakery in Park Slope, Brooklyn and a purveyor of designer hand axes.

Square Market has also signed up some small service providers, from lawn mowers to massage therapists, said Square product director Ajit Varma.

Rick Oglesby, a mobile payments analyst at AITE Group, said Square could tap into a large market that includes neighborhood bakeries and ice cream parlors with no Web presence. Nearly 67 percent of small businesses do not have an e-commerce presence, Oglesby added, citing his own survey.

"There's a very big opportunity to help these businesses create an online channel for the first time," he said. "This is a neat solution for the small guys."

At a time when the company is facing competitive pressure from all sides, Square is hoping to raise its profile with shoppers, both online and offline, to entice merchants to adopt its service.

"Ultimately, they need to get more consumer eyeballs so that they're more and more attractive to merchants," Oglesby said.

Cory Verellen, the owner of a boutique shop in Seattle that sells and repairs Polaroid cameras, said he keeps an independent website that uses PayPal. He is not ready to abandon his website for Square Market yet, but is pleased it was already sending him new customers as of late Wednesday, the first day it opened.

"Even today, I've had so many people get a hold of me and say: ‘I can't believe a store like this exists,'" Verellen said. "So the biggest benefit to me is advertising. Square's building its own small business ecosystem and I think we could be seeing something big."

(Reporting by Gerry Shih. Editing by Andre Grenon)

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Friday, June 21, 2013

Reuters: Small Business News: 'Sharing economy' companies go mainstream

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'Sharing economy' companies go mainstream
Jun 21st 2013, 23:30

(L-R) Leah Busque, Chief Executive of TaskRabbit, Mark Gilbreath, founder and Chief Executive of LiquidSpace, Andre Haddad, Chief Executive of RelayRides, and Brian Chesky, co-founder and Chief Executive of AirBnb, attend the Reuters Global Technology Summit in San Francisco June 18, 2013. REUTERS/Stephen Lam

(L-R) Leah Busque, Chief Executive of TaskRabbit, Mark Gilbreath, founder and Chief Executive of LiquidSpace, Andre Haddad, Chief Executive of RelayRides, and Brian Chesky, co-founder and Chief Executive of AirBnb, attend the Reuters Global Technology Summit in San Francisco June 18, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Stephen Lam

By Sarah McBride

SAN FRANCISCO | Fri Jun 21, 2013 7:30pm EDT

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - A few years ago, renting out a spare room via the lodging website Airbnb bordered on daring. Now, in thousands of cities around the world, it seems almost conventional.

But as the founders of the emerging category of "sharing economy" companies are learning, going mainstream brings a whole new set of legal and regulatory challenges.

Sharing companies enable people to share anything from a car to a house to an office desk, using the Internet to vet and match those who have something with those who need it.

Sharing-economy entrepreneurs say their firms are a boon to the economy, because they enable productive use of assets that would otherwise be sitting idle. And they can enable all manner of people to, in effect, start their own small business.

"We could create millions of entrepreneurs who don't fit into the market system," Brian Chesky, co-founder and chief executive of Airbnb, said at a Reuters Technology Summit roundtable in San Francisco this week.

Airbnb itself is an entrepreneurial phenomenon, with venture investors valuing it at $2.5 billion. Sharing firms such as RelayRides (rent out your car), LiquidSpace (rent out a spare workspace) and TaskRabbit (rent your free time for errands) are just a few of the myriad new firms with "sharing" models.

"Certainly, this is becoming mainstream," said Jeremiah Owyang, an analyst at research firm Altimeter Group. Peer-to-peer rental of goods such as toys and electronics is already a $26 billion industry, estimates Rachel Botsman, author of "What's Mine Is Yours: The Rise of Collaborative Consumption."

But moving beyond small circles of like-minded people in tech-savvy cities to become national or global services with millions of customers is no simple matter.

Airbnb has run up against local regulations in many cities that restrict the way rooms can be rented. In New York, for example, the city fined Airbnb host Nigel Warren $2,400 for renting out part of his apartment in September.

A judge ruled in May that Warren violated a law forbidding short-term rentals by residents; the city's Environmental Control Board has granted an extension until July 15 for him to file an appeal. Many cities have similar laws.

But Airbnb's Chesky said he believes educating officials on the merits of his business could result in the city softening its stance, citing examples such as Amsterdam, where the city was originally against Airbnb and is now allowing it, he said.

One tactic: convincing officials that Airbnb is contributing to the local economy. Earlier this month, Airbnb released a study showing that guests and hosts in Paris contributed $240 million to the local economy; Airbnb guests stayed an average of five nights, compared with two for those who stayed in hotels.

Similarly, insurance companies are grappling with how to handle car-sharing businesses, in some cases discouraging their customers from working with them.

RelayRides, the biggest player in the sector, provides car owners with $1 million in liability insurance during the rental. In other words, the owner's existing auto insurance would not come into play if the rental driver gets into an accident, according to RelayRides Chief Executive Andre Haddad.

But the insurance industry raises questions such as what happens if there is a dispute over whether a ding to the car happened while it was rented out, or while the owner was driving. And in serious accidents, $1 million may not be enough, a spokeswoman for the Insurance Information Institute said.

In February 2012 in Boston, a driver of a RelayRides car hit another car with four passengers and died. Insurance companies are still negotiating over who will pay what.

Haddad said he cannot comment on that case. But he pointed out the insurance RelayRides offers is several times what the average driver carries or state minimums.

"You are better off being in an accident with a RelayRides car," he said.

GOVERNMENTS JOIN THE GAME

Some of the companies advocate drawing local governments into using their services as a way to bring them around to seeing the law the sharing-economy way.

"We have libraries and city halls and municipalities that are using our platform to make their space more accessible," said Mark Gilbreath, chief executive of office-rental service LiquidSpace, who cites the Palo Alto City Library and the County of Santa Cruz, both in California, as examples. "Demystify it by bringing them into it."

Like most sharing companies, TaskRabbit has put a lot of effort into background checks and other methods of assuring that those who provide its services are trustworthy. Founder Leah Busque said about 12,000 people now actively offer their errand-running services on her site.

Increasingly, the executives say, participants are turning to social networking services such as Facebook (FB.O) to build comfort over doing business with someone they may not know.

Customers appreciate that sharing-economy businesses are often less expensive than comparable services, such as hiring a temporary staffer through a traditional agency. The services sometimes give a different flavor - staying with a local rather than at a hotel - or seem more socially or environmentally responsible, as with renting a car for a few hours from time to time rather than buying one.

Ironically, one factor that has helped bring many people into the sharing economy â€" a weak overall economy â€" may take some out of it as the economy improves, creating less incentive to run errands for others or rent out a personal car. But the sharing-economy businesses say they are not worried.

"It's simply a more efficient model that will endure whether it's an upcycle of growth, or whether it's a downcycle," said Gilbreath.

Follow Reuters Summits on Twitter @Reuters_Summits

(Reporting by Sarah McBride; Editing by Jonathan Weber and Phil Berlowitz)

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Reuters: Small Business News: Online dating company Cupid gets approaches for casual dating websites

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Online dating company Cupid gets approaches for casual dating websites
Jun 21st 2013, 07:16

Fri Jun 21, 2013 3:16am EDT

(Reuters) - Internet dating site Cupid Plc said it has been approached by multiple parties for its casual dating websites and added that it expects core earnings for the first half to be hit by higher marketing costs.

Cupid, which disclosed last month that it was in talks to sell its casual dating business that operates the benaughty.com and flirt.com websites, said on Friday it was exploring the approaches it has received for the business.

The company said earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization, for the six months ending June 30 is estimated to be about 2.5 million pounds ($3.9 million). Cupid reported adjusted EBITDA of 5.9 million pounds last year.

Cupid, which faced media allegations earlier this year about the methods it used to encourage people to buy subscriptions, said an independent review of its member database and operating practices was due to be completed by the end of June.

The company said it has also undertaken a separate review by a legal team and implemented several recommendations, including clearer guidelines for customer service staff interactions.

Shares in the company closed at 69 pence on Thursday on the London Stock Exchange. They have lost roughly two-thirds of their value so far this year.

(Reporting by Tasim Zahid in Bangalore; Editing by Supriya Kurane)

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Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Reuters: Small Business News: Start-up to bring test-drive cars to buyers, avoiding dealership

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Start-up to bring test-drive cars to buyers, avoiding dealership
Jun 19th 2013, 12:00

A man walks next to Chevrolet vehicles at a GM dealership in Miami, Florida August 12, 2010. REUTERS/Carlos Barria

A man walks next to Chevrolet vehicles at a GM dealership in Miami, Florida August 12, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/Carlos Barria

By Ben Klayman

DETROIT | Wed Jun 19, 2013 8:00am EDT

DETROIT (Reuters) - A new company hopes to make the car-buying process easier for consumers and more efficient for dealers by bringing cars to buyers for test drives, avoiding the need to spend hours at a dealership.

With car sales people ranked below members of Congress in trustworthiness in a Gallup poll last December and many buyers shopping online before heading to dealer lots for a test drive -- and the accompanying sales pitch -- the firm's founder thinks he's targeted a sweet spot.

So do his financial backers, which include a General Motors (GM.N) former chief executive and an auto dealer who previously owned the NFL's Minnesota Vikings.

Tred, which officially launches in the Seattle area on Wednesday, will deliver almost any vehicle to a potential buyer for $19 a car. Dealers will pay the start-up an undisclosed amount for each test drive.

The plan is eventually to roll the service out in other densely populated cities such as New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco, Tred Chief Executive and founder Grant Feek said.

"I always felt there should be a better experience, a better way to buy," he said in a telephone interview.

Tred, launched in January 2012, will initially work with about 30 dealers in the Seattle area representing nearly all brands.

Tred raised $100,000 in a first round of financing from a group that included former GM CEO Rick Wagoner, whom Feek, 32, met while Wagoner was speaking to Feek and his classmates at Harvard Business School.

Last fall, the Seattle-based company raised another $1.7 million from several private equity firms, including Fraser McCombs Capital. The firm's equity pool includes money from the family of Red McCombs, who owns eight dealerships in San Antonio and used to own the Vikings as well as the NBA's San Antonio Spurs.

Tony Rimas, a principal with Fraser McCombs, Tred's largest shareholder, said the new service is meant to improve the sales rate at dealers. "A customer asking for a car to be brought to their house is in my opinion converted from a shopper to a buyer," he said.

The online service will allow consumers to set up test drives of competing vehicles, which will be delivered by Tred employees not associated with the dealers providing the cars, Feek said.

The employee rides along on the test drive and provides a packet of information that includes a checklist to help reduce the time spent in a dealer's showroom to one to two hours from the national average of more than four, he said.

Tred also supplies a report with the vehicle's suggested retail price, prices on websites such as those of Kelley Blue Book and TrueCar, as well as the no-haggle price from the dealer supplying the vehicle.

(Editing by Dan Grebler)

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Thursday, June 13, 2013

Reuters: Small Business News: Europe's SMEs need more public sector support: report

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Europe's SMEs need more public sector support: report
Jun 13th 2013, 23:18

By Laura Noonan

LONDON | Thu Jun 13, 2013 7:18pm EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - Europe's cash-starved small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) need more public sector help, as there is little appetite among private investors to step in and fill the gap left by retrenching banks, a major study has found.

The report, by industry group the Association of Financial Markets in Europe (AFME) and consultants Oliver Wyman, said there were a number of ways policymakers could encourage private investors like insurance companies and asset managers to pump more funds into Europe's struggling economy.

These include promoting private placements, where debt is sold directly to large investors without a market auction, and securitization, where lenders bundle loans together and sell them on to an outside investors.

Both funding methods are common in the United States, but are less prevalent in Europe, where firms rely much more on bank debt and foreign private placements. This leaves them exposed as banks cut back lending to reduce their risks in the wake of the financial crisis, and also opens them up to currency risks.

However, the report, which AFME said drew on a representative sample of 75 businesses across Europe as well as industry groups and AFME's own bank and investor members, showed private investors have little interest in funding SMEs.

"The majority of non-bank investors interviewed did not have appetite to lend directly to SMEs as it did not fit with their business models," the report said.

"Solutions therefore focus on selectively increasing public sector support where banks do not have the capacity or risk appetite to lend to certain SMEs."

Funding to SMEs has been one of the most critical challenges faced by the European economy, with Britain embarking on the "Funding for Lending" scheme in a bid to tempt banks into lending by offering them cheap funding, and the European Central Bank considering new supports for lending.

AFME, which plans to present its report to policymakers across Europe over the coming months, recommended further support for SMEs from the European Investment Bank.

It also urged the creation of more loan guarantee schemes and national government SME support agencies like Germany's KfW, a state-owned bank that made loans of 73.4 billion euros ($97.6 billion) last year.

($1 = 0.7519 euros)

(Editing by Mark Potter)

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Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Reuters: Small Business News: France clips wings of 'chick' entrepreneurs

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France clips wings of 'chick' entrepreneurs
Jun 12th 2013, 13:37

French Minister for Industrial Recovery Arnaud Montebourg waves goodbye after attending a ministers' meeting at the Elysee Palace in Paris May 6, 2013. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes

French Minister for Industrial Recovery Arnaud Montebourg waves goodbye after attending a ministers' meeting at the Elysee Palace in Paris May 6, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Gonzalo Fuentes

By Natalie Huet

PARIS | Wed Jun 12, 2013 9:37am EDT

PARIS (Reuters) - France trimmed tax breaks and other advantages for small entrepreneurs on Wednesday, saying the benefits introduced under former President Nicolas Sarkozy had failed to help business start-ups and were open to abuse.

But Francois Hollande's Socialist government said it would not scrap the so-called "auto-entrepreneur" status altogether, conceding that it had helped thousands into part-time work that boosted their spending power and kept them off jobless queues, now at 14-year record highs.

The decision came despite an eye-catching online campaign by auto-entrepreneurs calling themselves "The Chicks", inspired by another group called "The Pigeons" that forced the government last year to exempt entrepreneurs from capital gains tax rises.

"The government wanted to come up with a reform that was fair and balanced, reconciling the needs of all," Minister for Trades and Tourism Sylvia Pinel told a news conference.

Building firms complain that auto-entrepreneurs use their special status to undercut them on cost. Separately, trade unions say companies are turning to these self-employed rather than hiring workers on more expensive regular contracts.

Under the auto-entrepreneur scheme - which people can join and quit online with a few clicks - labor charges are paid only as earnings come in, rather than upfront as companies must do.

Pinel said the income ceilings above which entrepreneurs must leave the scheme would be lowered from 32,600 euros ($43,300)to 19,000 euros a year for those in the services sector, and from 81,500 to 47,500 euros for those supplying merchandise.

Auto-entrepreneurs whose income exceeds those limits for two years in a row will have a transition period in which they must convert to regular company status.

"The original rules were clear and are becoming more complicated now," said Gregoire Leclercq, head of the French Auto-Entrepreneurs Federation.

"This will dampen the entrepreneurial spirit, it will hold back the growth in the number of start-ups," he told Reuters.

Around 900,000 French took up the auto-entrepreneur status. From plumbers to hairdressers and teachers, most barely scrape a living - nine out of ten earn less than the gross monthly minimum wage of 1,430 euros.

Most people join the scheme to earn a secondary income in their household or escape from unemployment. The advantage for the government is that they are off welfare benefits and their income is declared and taxed, albeit at a concessionary rate.

(Writing by Mark John; Editing by Paul Taylor)

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Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Reuters: Small Business News: Small business confidence hits one-year high in May

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Small business confidence hits one-year high in May
Jun 11th 2013, 11:33

Small-business owners Ralph Gorham (2nd L) and Susan Povich (R) work with their employees to sell lobster rolls at their shop ''Redhook Lobster Pound'' in New York December 16, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/Lucas Jackson

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Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Reuters: Small Business News: Small businesses cut jobs in May: NFIB

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Small businesses cut jobs in May: NFIB
Jun 5th 2013, 14:15

Small-business owner Ralph Gorham checks the salinity of his holding tanks at his shop ''Redhook Lobster Pound'' in New York December 16, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/Lucas Jackson

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Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Reuters: Small Business News: IBM to buy website hosting service SoftLayer

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IBM to buy website hosting service SoftLayer
Jun 5th 2013, 04:33

A worker is pictured behind a logo at the IBM stand on the CeBIT computer fair in Hanover February 26, 2011. REUTERS/Tobias Schwarz

A worker is pictured behind a logo at the IBM stand on the CeBIT computer fair in Hanover February 26, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Tobias Schwarz

By Jennifer Saba

Wed Jun 5, 2013 12:33am EDT

(Reuters) - International Business Machines said on Tuesday it would acquire Web hosting company SoftLayer Technologies and create a new division for clients interested in so-called cloud services, a move to better compete with larger rivals in the space.

Executives with IBM and SoftLayer declined to comment on the terms of the deal on a call with reporters.

Reuters reported in March that IBM, among others, had been in talks to buy SoftLayer in a deal that could fetch more than $2 billion.

Dallas-based SoftLayer, which leases online storage space to companies, was founded in 2005 and has become what it says is the world's largest privately held website hosting service. The company provides its 25,000 customers, including AT&T Inc and Citrix Systems Inc, with cloud infrastructure.

The company competes with Amazon.com Inc's Web services business and Rackspace Hosting Inc.

Like rivals Hewlett Packard Co and Microsoft Corp, IBM has increasingly invested in cloud services as corporate users move away from costly internal information technology infrastructure.

IBM has traditionally specialized in assisting large corporate and government users but has been trying in recent years to expand into smaller businesses.

AIMING BIG

But Erich Clementi, senior vice president of IBM Global Technology Services, said on a call with reporters that IBM is shooting squarely for the large business segment with this acquisition.

"We are the largest infrastructure provider to the enterprise world on the planet," he said "That is our focus."

Over the last few years, Web hosting companies have been considered attractive takeover candidates as technology and telecom companies look to improve the performance and cost efficiencies of their cloud computing services for businesses.

Wells Fargo analyst Gray Powell estimated that the transaction was worth 11.1 times SoftLayer's projected 2013 earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization.

That compares with Rackspace, which is currently trading at 11 times 2013 estimated EBITDA, Powell noted.

IBM said it expected to gain $7 billion annually in revenue from cloud services by the end of 2015. It created a new division called Cloud Services, which will combine SoftLayer and IBM's existing offerings into a global platform.

SoftLayer is majority held by GI Partners, which purchased all of the equity in partnership with the company's management in August 2010.

Data storage equipment maker EMC had been approached about SoftLayer as well. An EMC spokesman said on Tuesday, "EMC was initially approached, uninterested and decided not to bid."

IBM said it expected the deal to close in the third quarter.

Shares of IBM were down about 1 percent at $206.78.

(Reporting by Jennifer Saba in New York; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn and Carol Bishopric)

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Reuters: Small Business News: Online demand boosts market for rarest books, expert says

Reuters: Small Business News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Online demand boosts market for rarest books, expert says
Jun 4th 2013, 09:34

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A commuter reads on his Kindle e-reader as a subway train arrives in Cambridge, Massachusetts, March 18, 2011. REUTERS/Brian Snyder

A commuter reads on his Kindle e-reader as a subway train arrives in Cambridge, Massachusetts, March 18, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Brian Snyder

By Nigel Stephenson

HAY-ON-WYE, Wales | Tue Jun 4, 2013 5:34am EDT

HAY-ON-WYE, Wales (Reuters) - Prices of the rarest books are rising as the Internet drives the trade off dusty shelves and into the digital age, a leading expert said this weekend.

Matthew Haley, head of the books, manuscripts and photographs department at auction house Bonhams in London, said the rise of online catalogues and aggregators of booksellers' stock meant more collectors were aware when a rare find came on the market.

"More people can find it and there is only one of them around," he told an audience at the Hay Festival, adding this was pushing prices of the rare and the one-off higher.

At the same time, demand was growing for what he termed "quirkiana" or books on specialist, niche topics.

"We see that the mid-rank is really the struggling area of the market, which in our terms would be books between 100 pounds and a thousand," Haley said.

Into this category he put books that, while rare, were not unique, and modern first editions as potential purchasers could scour the web for other examples more easily than in the past.

With prices rising at the top and bottom of the market but easing in the middle, the overall value of the market was holding at up to $600 million a year, he said.

Haley said the outlook for second-hand bookshops, which he said were closing "at a tremendous rate", was not good.

"I fear that we are going to see the end of the serendipity of browsing through a bookshop and finding a book you didn't know you wanted," he said.

He said some in the industry forecast digital books would outsell printed books in Britain in 2015. Yet the shift to digital publishing only made physical books more alluring to many people.

"There is no substitute for handling a book," he said, adding many people still treasured the feel of crisp paper or the smell of an old volume.

(Editing by Paul Casciato)

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Monday, June 3, 2013

Reuters: Small Business News: French self-employed threaten to boost jobless register in tax protest

Reuters: Small Business News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
French self-employed threaten to boost jobless register in tax protest
Jun 3rd 2013, 19:14

French Minister for Industrial Recovery Arnaud Montebourg waves goodbye after attending a ministers' meeting at the Elysee Palace in Paris May 6, 2013. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes

French Minister for Industrial Recovery Arnaud Montebourg waves goodbye after attending a ministers' meeting at the Elysee Palace in Paris May 6, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Gonzalo Fuentes

By Catherine Bremer

PARIS | Mon Jun 3, 2013 3:14pm EDT

PARIS (Reuters) - Self-employed French workers angered by plans to restrict their special tax status are urging supporters to sign up as unemployed and inflate already record-high jobless figures.

The plan, by a spin-off of an online protest group called "The Chicks" which has 70,000 supporters, would hit President Francois Hollande in his most vulnerable spot as he battles to meet a pledge to reverse the unemployment trend by year-end.

The self-employed cannot claim unemployment benefits but they hope the threat of adding to the 3.26 million registered as jobless could scare the government into burying plans to limit their "auto-entrepreneur" tax status to two years.

"You can register online with the unemployment office. It's easy. If it pushes up next month's jobless figures it would be catastrophic for the government," said Gregoire Leclercq, head of the French Auto-Entrepreneurs Federation.

Some 900,000 self-employed people, from hairdressers and language tutors to business developers, benefit on a permanent basis from reduced red tape and the right to pay social security charges as earnings come in rather than upfront.

Junior trade minister Sylvia Pinel wants to change that after complaints from construction firms that self-employed builders free of paperwork and social charges can undercut them.

A 19-year-old video games creator hatched "The Chicks" website after "The Pigeons" October Internet revolt won entrepreneurs exemptions from capital gains tax hikes.

Entrepreneurs say forcing people to register as formal businesses after two years of operation would crush start-ups just as France needs new jobs to pull it out of recession.

Confusion ensued as Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault said any changes would only apply to the building sector, but junior minister Pinel said many sectors would be affected.

"We haven't given up on the reform," Pinel told the daily Le Parisien on Sunday. "The prime minister has asked me to continue talks based on the options I was already working on."

Under European Union pressure to sort out France's finances, Hollande wants to cut back exemptions in a country where roughly one household in two pays no income tax, but Pinel's plan risks reinforcing a view the government is anti-business.

On the Chicks' website (defensepoussins.fr) a peevish cartoon chick with sunglasses and a mohican-like quiff holds a placard reading: "Don't kill our projects in the egg."

As Pinel prepares to meet Leclercq and the head of a second association, the Union of Auto-Entrepreneurs, on Thursday to discuss the matter, Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici assured radio listeners that the Chicks would be listened to.

An April report by two government bodies found the auto-entrepreneur system to be broadly cost-effective and suggested it should be left alone.

(Reporting by Catherine Bremer; Editing by Ruth Pitchford)

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Reuters: Small Business News: Start-up tries tapping market of uninsured dental patients

Reuters: Small Business News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Start-up tries tapping market of uninsured dental patients
Jun 3rd 2013, 12:16

Claudio Levato, a dentist, works on removing a tooth for Janet Zamora at Comprehensive Dentistry in Bloomingdale, Illinois, April 21, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Jim Young

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Saturday, June 1, 2013

Reuters: Small Business News: Yelp open to partnering with Facebook's rival offering: CFO

Reuters: Small Business News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Yelp open to partnering with Facebook's rival offering: CFO
Jun 1st 2013, 23:54

The Facebook logo is pictured at the Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park, California January 29, 2013. REUTERS/Robert Galbraith

The Facebook logo is pictured at the Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park, California January 29, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Robert Galbraith

By Chandni Doulatramani

Sat Jun 1, 2013 7:54pm EDT

(Reuters) - Consumer review aggregator Yelp Inc, which analysts say could face intense competition from Facebook Inc's "graph search", is open to partnering with the social networking website's latest offering, Yelp's Chief Financial Officer Rob Krolik told Reuters.

Facebook, in January, unveiled its graph search feature, available in a beta version, letting users trawl their network of friends to find everything from restaurants to movie recommendations, bringing it into direct competition with Yelp.

Analysts have viewed this as a big negative for Yelp as companies such as Facebook have a lot of opportunity to imitate smaller companies, and over a larger audience.

"We are actually happy to partner with Facebook (for graph search) if that's something that they're interested in," Krolik said.

Facebook declined to comment on any possible partnership.

Yelp's mobile app makes it easier for people to discover local businesses. It combines Yelp's reviews and other relevant information with knowledge of the consumer's location. It also allows consumers to "check-in" at local businesses.

Google Inc, through its Google Plus Local product, also recommends businesses to its users based on circles, past reviews, location and allows them to publish reviews and photos of favorite places.

"Facebook and Google and some other players really are attacking the local space via technology," Krolik said.

Krolik said Yelp, which is integrated into Apple Inc's Maps product and their Siri product, would definitely monitor Facebook's graph search and see what it's all about.

"I just don't think people go to Facebook to find a great local business. I think they connect with their friends, see a lot of photos."

Macquarie Research analyst Tom White said it was not particularly likely that the partnership would happen, because Facebook thinks they have enough data to do it themselves.

He, however said, if it was to happen, it would benefit Yelp, and would cut down competition from Facebook.

"It would mean broader distribution for their reviews, and more people reading their reviews," White said.

"It's not directly a revenue generator, but in theory it would increase the value of advertising on Yelp, just because you're getting it out to more people."

The success of graph search, which will rely heavily on local information, depends on Facebook launching a mobile app. In addition, graph search lacks the depth of review content offered by Yelp.

If Yelp were to partner with Facebook for graph search, the consumer review aggregator would be in a better position to compete with Google, Jefferies analyst Brian Fitzgerald told Reuters.

Yelp already has a tie-up with Facebook Connect, which allows users to login with their Facebook credentials without having to create separate accounts for different websites.

A Yelp user can see if a Facebook friend has reviewed a business. (r.reuters.com/fyp58t)

Jefferies' Fitzgerald said Yelp could also make a good acquisition target for Apple, Google or Facebook.

"Any one of those guys could acquire Yelp and they would be able to use it pretty productively," he said.

Yelp was founded by former PayPal engineers Jeremy Stoppelman and Russel Simmons as a start-up idea in a business incubator in 2004. It has never been profitable since its inception.

Analysts expect the company to post its first profit of 1 cent per share for the first quarter of 2014, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

The company's earnings quality score on Thomson Reuters StarMine rose to 7 out of 100, from 5, after it reported its earnings for the January-March quarter. This compares with a sector median of 63.

The earnings quality model rates companies according to the sustainability of their earnings.

Yelp shares, which have risen about 80 percent in the last year, closed marginally down at $29.81 on the New York Stock Exchange on Friday. They had fallen 6 percent on January 15, when Facebook unveiled its graph search.

(Additional reporting by Supantha Mukherjee in Bangalore and Alexei Oreskovic in San Francisco)

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