Business & Finance

April 8, 2002

Embattled auditor Arthur Andersen LLP is expected to announce layoffs today that, according to The New York Times, could affect as many as 7,000 of the Chicago-based company's 28,000 workers. Thousands more jobs are at stake in a tentative deal for rival accounting firm Deloitte & Touche to acquire the bulk of Andersen's tax unit. A Houston judge, meanwhile, will hold a hearing on a request by a group of insurers to block Andersen from selling off its assets. The insurers are among plaintiffs in a lawsuit filed over the Enron Corp. collapse.

KirchMedia was expected to file for bankruptcy following Friday's breakdown of talks in Munich and Los Angeles on a rescue plan for the deeply indebted German conglomerate. German creditor banks reportedly were discussing a proposal with publishing groups Axel Springer and WAZ to take a controlling stake in KirchMedia, once it is placed in administration.

Nearly a year after Bridgestone/Firestone and Ford ended a 95-year relationship amid a massive tire recall, a report surfaced Sunday that Japan's Bridgestone Corp. has concluded a contract to provide tires to General Motors Corp. Tokyo's Nihon Keizai economic daily said that in terms of the contract, Bridgestone/Firestone, the company's US unit, will provide an estimated 2.5 million tires a year for 500,000 vehicles.

German media giant Bertelsmann wants to take over Napster Inc., the Redwood City, Calif.-based online music service that was shut down by court order last year following a copyright infringement lawsuit. Bertelsmann chief executive Thomas Middelhoff told the newspaper Die Welt, "We want to buy out the original shareholders." Following the lawsuit, Bertelsmann and Napster embarked on a venture to distribute music legally and the German firm extended about $85 million in loans to the ailing online service.