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Wyatt Research Staff

Ashland, Williams Controls and First M&F among 52-week lows

Ashland Inc. (Nasdaq:ASH), Williams Controls Inc. (Nasdaq:WMCO) and First M&F Corp. (Nasdaq:FMFC) are among the new 52-week lows in Monday's trading among companies with market capitalizations under $1 billion.

Also included among the results: Bancorp Rhode Island Inc. (Nasdaq:BARI), Heckmann Corp. (Nasdaq:HEK), Cheviot Financial Corp. (Nasdaq:CHEV), Invacare Corp. (Nasdaq:IVC), Northwest Bancorp Inc. (Nasdaq:NWSB) and Northeast Community Bancorp Inc. (Nasdaq:NECB).
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Will Atkinson

Vivus, ATA and America's Car-Mart among 52-week highs

Vivus Inc (Nasdaq:VVUS), ATA Inc (Nasdaq:ATAI) and America's Car-Mart Inc (Nasdaq:CRMT) are among the new 52-week highs in Friday's trading among companies with market capitalizations under $750 million.

Third Wave Technologies Inc (Nasdaq:TWTI), Heckmann Corp (Nasdaq:HEK) and Westwood Holdings Group Inc (Nasdaq:WHG) are also among the new 52-week highs.

Here are the new 52-week highs among small caps:
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Will Atkinson

Delta Natural Gas, Seanergy Maritime Units and Heckmann among 52-week highs

Delta Natural Gas Co Inc (Nasdaq:DGAS), Seanergy Maritime Units (Nasdaq:SRG.U) and Heckmann Corp (Nasdaq:HEK) are among the new 52-week highs in Thursday's trading among companies with market capitalizations under $750 million.

American Israeli Paper Mills Ltd (Nasdaq:AIP), Powell Industries Inc (Nasdaq:POWL) and American Ecology Corp (Nasdaq:ECOL) are also among the new 52-week highs.

Here are the new 52-week highs among small caps:
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Ann C. Logue

IPO Watch: Liberty Lane acquisition

(Nasdaq:LLACU)
Scheduled for the week of May 19
$350 million estimated proceeds
$378.4 million estimated post-money valuation

If buying stock at an initial public offering is an act of faith, investing in special-purpose acquisition companies (SPACs) — startups with no operating assets (and no guarantee they will find any) — is an act of blind faith.

A SPAC is created with the sole purpose of acquiring an operating business with shareholders' money. Despite the fact that few SPACs have found anything to buy, new ones keep cropping up. Liberty Lane’s big selling point seems to be that it’s the first one that mighty Goldman Sachs is bringing to market, which may make it seem more legitimate in a sector once dominated by squirrelly shell companies traded in Vancouver.

Its founding officers, Paul Montrone and Paul Meister, had long tenures with Fisher Scientific, a manufacturer of scientific and industrial instruments now known as Thermo Fisher (NYSE:TMO). Montrone served as CEO from 1991 to 2006, and Meister was the company’s CFO from 1991 until 2001, when he was named vice-chairman of the board.

Fisher Scientific grew in part through 60 acquisitions, so the draw is that Montrone and Meister know to find acquisition candidates and structure good deals. Liberty Lane isn’t the only SPAC with experienced dealmakers at the helm, but not all have that distinction; several SPACs have executives who are more figureheads than deal-makers (Heckmann Corporation (NYSE:HEK) has on its board former Notre Dame football coach Lou Holtz and former U.S. Vice President Dan Quayle).

But no matter how good a track record Montrone and Meister have, they still have to find a good business to buy in the next two years, and that’s tough to . . .

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