August 21, 2009

Bankrupt. Not sexy.


Aug. 21 (Bloomberg) -- Italy, Europe’s most-indebted nation, is dodging the global corporate bankruptcy wave as lenders, financiers and the government band together to rescue a record number of troubled companies.

Nineteen companies sitting on at least 5.7 billion euros ($8.1 billion) of debt have said since April their auditors had “significant doubts” about their ability to continue as going concerns. More than 20, among them Maserati designer Pininfarina SpA, have said they can’t pay their loans and asked banks to freeze or delay payments. Italy aims to save them all.

The strategy harkens back to Italy in the 1930s under Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini, who formed a state industrial company to bail out banks and beef up national infrastructure. Only one publicly traded company, IT Holding SpA, owner of the Gianfranco Ferre fashion house, has filed for bankruptcy protection this year, amid the worst recession in six decades. No publicly traded company has gone out of business.

“Mussolini was seen as the savior for stepping in and nationalizing banks and manufacturers after the Great Depression to avoid the economy’s collapse,” said Fernando Napolitano, country managing director of Booz & Co. in Rome. “It’s still happening.”

Banks to the Rescue

Italian banks are spearheading corporate bailouts, plowing as much as 40 percent of their assets, more than twice the European average, into troubled companies, according to the country’s banking association, ABI. About 130 lenders agreed this month to let as many as a million small and medium-sized companies postpone loan payments for a year, giving them additional liquidity of as much as 40 billion euros.

Among the beneficiaries is Risanamento SpA, developer of the Santa Giulia luxury apartment complex designed by Norman Foster near Milan. The company, which has about 2.9 billion euros in debt, is due to present a restructuring plan to a Milan court to respond to a prosecutor’s statement that it has failed. Rivals Aedes SpA and Gabetti Property Solutions SpA were also granted extensions by creditor banks. All are based in Milan.

“On paper, a lot of companies are already bankrupt,” said Arnaldo Borghesi, founding partner of corporate financial advisory firm Borghesi Colombo & Associati in Milan. “They may not be able to pay wages or their suppliers and haven’t got enough cash to keep going.”

Global Bankruptcies

So far, Italy has avoided the high-profile bankruptcies that have plagued European and U.S. companies including General Motors Corp., Christian Lacroix SNC and Waterford Wedgwood Plc.

Banks’ willingness to pledge more funds stems in part from balance sheets that are healthy compared with European rivals, said Gianfranco Torriero, head of research at ABI. UniCredit SpA, Italy’s largest bank, last year reported net income of 4 billion euros. Its nearest rival, Intesa Sanpaolo SpA, reported 2.6 billion-euro profit. By contrast, Deutsche Bank AG, Germany’s biggest lender, had a loss of 3.8 billion euros.

Lenders have been anxious to keep companies out of extraordinary administration, Italy’s version of bankruptcy protection, because their claims come after those of employees, certain suppliers and taxes, slimming a chance of repayment, said Francesco Faldi, managing associate at law firm Linklaters LLP in Milan.

Last Resort

“It is a last resort from a bank’s perspective,” said Faldi, who is specialized in restructuring, insolvency and banking at the law firm. “The administrator’s job is to put the interests of the employees, and not the creditors, first.”

While the most troubled businesses have been saved, the bailouts have claimed casualties, with some of the families that founded the companies being pushed out.

Pininfarina, founded in 1930 by Battista “Pinin” Farina, said this month it hired Leonardo & Co. SpA to sell its stake in the company, designer of Ferrari and Alfa Romeo sports cars. Creditor banks in December took control of the brand in return for writing off debt. Turin-based Pininfarina didn’t respond to two phone calls and two e-mail requests for comment.

At Mariella Burani Fashion Group SpA, Giovanni Burani, the son of the founder, was among managers replaced last month after the company requested a halt to its loan payments. Burani didn’t return calls seeking comment. Luigi Zunino, who founded Risanamento, was also ousted at the property company. The company declined to comment on his departure.

The bailout bonanza can’t mask the fact that Italian companies are suffering. Some 30 companies, most of them privately owned mom-and-pop businesses, closed each day in the first half, an increase from 21 in the year-earlier period, according to Italy’s Chambers of Commerce.

“I travel the country all the time, and small businesses are telling me that they have had to lay off workers for the first time ever,” said Giuseppe Morandini, president of small businesses for employers’ lobby group Confindustria. “Their sales have dropped by as much as 50 percent in the slowdown.”


-Bloomberg

August 19, 2009

Flamma great IKEA!

Helmut Smits (1974) is a multidisciplinary visual artist based in Rotterdam, The Netherlands. His FLAMMA work is a set of 8 different IKEA products with which you can start a fire, using the fire arc technique.


flamma_3.jpg


August 11, 2009

Louis Vuitton: Art. Fashion and Architecture.

Louis Vuitton partners with artist Camille Scherrer to present the new "Louis Vuitton: Art. Fashion and Architecture" book. Check out the animated movie of the book:

August 9, 2009

Audemars Piguet loves Montauk too




Montauk is a quite a special place and deserves to be on your list of places to go.  I have been fortunate enough to log many miles on my motorcycle cruising down Old Montauk Highway with the mist of the ocean in the air.  I am not surprised that AP has commemorated it with a very limited edition (300) timepiece.


August 6, 2009

Spring 2010 Collections • Sep. 10 - 17, 2009 • New York

THURSDAYSEPTEMBER 10, 2009
9 AMMICHAEL ANGEL 
Salon
10 AMBCBGMAXAZRIA 
Tent
1 PMDUCKIE BROWN 
Salon
3 PMPORTS 1961 
Tent
6-10 PMFASHION’S NIGHT OUT 

7 PMCESAR GALINDO 
M2 Ultra Lounge, 530 W 28th Street

FRIDAYSEPTEMBER 11, 2009
9 AMCYNTHIA STEFFE 
Salon
11 AMYIGAL AZROUËL 
Promenade
2 PMCHARLOTTE RONSON 
Promenade
6 PMNICOLE MILLER 
Salon
7 PMTHIS DAY/ARISE: AFRICAN FASHION COLLECTIVE 
Promenade
9 PMVENEXIANA 
Salon

SATURDAYSEPTEMBER 12, 2009
10 AMLACOSTE 
Tent
11 AMGEORGES CHAKRA 
Promenade
1 PMANDY & DEBB 
Salon
3 PMACADEMY of ART UNIVERSITY 
Tent
4 PMCHRISTIAN SIRIANO 
Promenade
7 PMCHADO RALPH RUCCI 
Tent
8 PMVIVIENNE TAM 
Promenade

SUNDAYSEPTEMBER 13, 2009
10 AMLELA ROSE 
Salon
11 AMDEREK LAM 
Promenade
1 PMDKNY 

2 PMTHUY 
Salon
3 PMHERVÉ LÉGER BY MAX AZRIA 
Promenade
4 PMDIANE VON FURSTENBERG 
Tent
5 PMREBECCA TAYLOR 
Salon
Y-3 

7 PMTULEH 
Promenade
8 PMCUSTO BARCELONA 
Tent
9 PMVASSILIOS KOSTETSOS 
Salon

MONDAYSEPTEMBER 14, 2009
10 AMCAROLINA HERRERA 
Tent
11 AMCARLOS MIELE 
Promenade
NoonJILL STUART 

1 PMTRACY REESE 
Salon
2 PMDONNA KARAN 

4 PMYEOHLEE 

5 PMTADASHI SHOJI 
Salon
6 PMTONYCOHEN 
Promenade
7 PMGOTTEX 
Tent

TUESDAYSEPTEMBER 15, 2009
10 AMBADGLEY MISCHKA 
Tent
11 AMBRIAN REYES 
Promenade
NoonTONI MATICEVSKI 
Altman Building, 135 West 18th Street
1 PMPAMELLA ROLAND 
Salon
2 PMMAX AZRIA 
Tent
3 PMDENNIS BASSO 
Promenade
6 PMWILLOW 
Salon
7 PMTIBI 
Promenade
8 PMNARCISO RODRIGUEZ 
Tent
9 PMTONI FRANCESC 
Salon

WEDNESDAYSEPTEMBER 16, 2009
9 AMTORY BURCH 
Salon
10 AMMICHAEL KORS 
Tent
11 AMNANETTE LEPORE 
Promenade
2 PM3.1 PHILLIP LIM 
Tent
3 PMMILLY BY MICHELLE SMITH 
Promenade
5 PMALEXANDRE HERCHCOVITCH 
Salon
6 PMANNA SUI 
Tent
7 PMDOO.RI 
Promenade

THURSDAYSEPTEMBER 17, 2009
9 AMRALPH LAUREN 
Skylight Studio, 275 Hudson Street
10 AMRALPH LAUREN 
Skylight Studio, 275 Hudson Street
11 AMRALPH LAUREN 
Skylight Studio, 275 Hudson Street
1 PMALLUDE 
Salon
2 PMISAAC MIZRAHI 
Tent
3 PMTRIAS 
Promenade
4 PMCALVIN KLEIN 

5 PMCALVIN KLEIN 

6 PMCHOCHENG 
Salon
7 PMARGENTINEAN DESIGNER COLLECTIONS 
Promenade
8 PMTOMMY HILFIGER 
Tent

Ronson does Gucci




With the anticipated success of Louis Vuiton’s collaboration with Kanye West, it is no surprise that Gucci wants their piece of celebrity designed luxury sneakers. Uber producer Mark Ronson is a natural candidate a long time footwear junkie with a keen eye for style makes for an interesting line. The collection will release at a series of Frida Giannini on several styles of Gucci Ronson’s for the brand’s upcoming series of sneakers-only pop-up shops, the first of which comes to NYC this October, then to London , Berlin, Paris, Hong Kong & Tokyo. Retail prices are unknown but are rumored to be in the $400-500 range.