Flying in Europe, Buying the weather

European airlines post strong June passenger levels. NBC and two private equity firms buy the Weather Channel. And a Hong Kong entrepreneur is willing to melt down almost everything in his golden palace, except for the toilet.

NEWS AT A GLANCE

Europe’s airlines report a good June

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NBC and partners buy the Weather Channel

NBC Universal and two private equity groups, Bain Capital and Blackstone, agreed to buy the Weather Channel from Landmark Communications for a reported price of just under $3.5 billion. The deal, reached after three weeks of talks, fell short of Landmark’s original $5 billion asking price. (The New York Times, free registration) The sale included Weather Channel properties, notably weather-dot-com, and the group will continue to operate as an independent business managed by NBC. At $3.5 billion, the deal would be one of the biggest private equity buys in the past year. The Weather Channel reaches more than 97 percent of all cable subscribers; about 40 million people visit the Web site each month. (Reuters)

Germany’s Fresenius enters U.S. generics market

German health care firm Fresenius SE agreed to buy U.S.-based APP Pharmaceuticals for at least $3.7 billion, allowing Fresenius Kabi—the world’s No. 1 dialysis provider—entry to the U.S. generics market. APP makes intravenous medications used by hospitals to treat cancer, infections, and pain, and for anesthesia. The $23-a-share price is 29 percent higher than APP’s July 3 closing price. (Bloomberg) Fresenius’ share dropped in German trading early today. “Strategically, the acquisition of APP would be a major step towards [Fresenius’] aim of becoming an IV generic player,” said Equinet brokers. But “it is not exactly a bargain.” (MarketWatch)

Sitting on a ton of gold

Hong Kong jeweler Lam Sai-wing has spent the past decade adorning a palace with six tons of gold, using the precious metal to make chandeliers, armchairs, suits of armor, and other household items. The golden palace showroom served Lam very well as a staple of tours from the mainland and a promotion for his jewelry business. But when the price of gold entered record territory, he started melting his palace down, using the tons of gold to fuel a big push into mainland China. But no matter how high gold gets, the 24-karat, fully functioning toilet stays intact. “I don’t care if gold hits $10,000 an ounce,” Lam says. “I’m not melting it down.” (The Wall Street Journal)