3 real-world deals despite fiscal cliff overhang
While Washington continues to argue about a budget deal, companies are making real business deals left and right.

How easy it is to focus on the tortured talks of Washington. You don't have to do a lot of work. All you need to do is turn on the television and see two leaders who obviously despise each other talk about how his opponent wants to raise taxes on the middle class. We only need to know when they are coming on, not what they are going to say -- we have that nailed down -- and then we can watch, with awe, at how hedge funds come out of the woodwork to blast down the S&P 500 ($INX) futures.
I just wish they would make it even easier. I wish when Speaker Boehner would come on he would dispense with the formalities and say, "I would sell the S&P down 2% based on my talks today." Or the President should limit his comments to "You better bang out of some Apple (AAPL), and be careful of the 50-day moving average of the transports because Speaker Boehner wants to raise taxes on everyone rather than hit up the hedge fund managers for their fair share."
Hedge fund managers should have to pay more given the annuity stream these two are generating.
But then, every once in a while, the real world intrudes, and you realize that the indices that are bouncing around off of the sinking below in Washington are made up of stocks and that stocks actually represent the fortunes of real companies.
Right now the real world is intruding in a big way with NYSE Euronext (NYX), Gardner Denver (GDI) and Alterra Capital Holdings (ALTE).
The first, you know by nature, but probably not by reason. CNBC's own David Faber broke the story Thursday morning that NYSE Euronext is in talks to be acquired by IntercontinentalExchange (ICE) for about $33 a share.
We think of NYSE as the place at which equities trade. IntercontinentalExchange, however, most likely thinks NYSE Euronext is a worldwide futures exchange with an unfortunate equities business with too much overhead. I bet IntercontinentalExchange thinks it could come in, smash the paternalism of the place and just get its hands on the machines, rationalizing a growth business (i.e., the futures) while stemming losses in a no-growth business (i.e., the equities).
It makes sense as a terrific consolidation play, and it is something that is happening irrespective of Washington.
The second intrusion of the real world into the surreal Washington world? Gardner Denver is in talks to be acquired by SPX Corporation (SPW).
You may not know Gardner Denver, but it is integral to the oil and gas food chain because it makes air compressors. Oil and gas drilling is very much in bull market mode because of the combination of hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling, and SPX is a classic industrial good manufacturer that needs to have more exposure to growth.
SPX could end up stealing Gardner Denver, which has been hit hard by the slowdown in natural gas drilling, for $4 billion, barely unchanged for the year. Still, it's a huge win if you bought it when Gardner Denver announced a shortfall earlier this fall and fell to $55. An impatient activist, ValueAct, obviously not focused on the charade in Washington, is getting the job done.
Finally, there is Alterra, a very big reinsurance company that just caught a bid from Markel (MKL), a well-respected insurer that's always been undervalued. Markel is picking up Alterra for $3.1 billion, a nice chunk of change, yet it seems as if the market didn't even notice.
And that's really the point. Three big deals, three that happened without worries of fiscal cliffs and off-again/off-again talks. Real money changing hands. Real wins to be had.
If anybody cares to have them.

Jim Cramer is a co-founder of TheStreet and contributes daily market commentary to the financial news network's sites. Follow his trades for Action Alerts PLUS, which Cramer co-manages as a charitable trust and is long AAPL.
More from TheStreet.com
You want to balance the budget...give all these overpaid lobby protecting politicians a 5% cut in pay and make them pay for their health insurance like every american has to and you will see how much the deficit will be reduced,,,forget all the rest of the bs that both sides are flingging to America
Close the now globally-recognized as corrupt banks. End the Federal Reserve. Get RID of Wall Street. The Fiscal Cliff is resolved by Job Recovery. Arrest those who blockade our restoration and force them off our shores.
Boehner and the Republicans playing political charade in time of crisis, cliff-type or not, is reason for immediate recall elections. How long should America wait while fools, thieves and incompetents drag the nation down? There are definitely deals being made everyday in America, it's just that most of them don't do much to increase job growth. Most deals, particularly in the financial and service industries are still pretty much totally focused on cost-reduction which typically leads to reductions in the work force.
It's time for government to take real action to increase sustainable growth in America, based not on over-commercialization and over-corporatization but on what is best for long term human growth, good living and good health over time.
There is nothing to figure out. A bunch of people get together and make business deals to do what needs to be done and not being overly preoccupied with the pay-off, the pay-off being self-evident throughout the nation for its having gotten better over time and not increasingly worse.
I don't know if the world ends tomorrow, but I'm pretty sure the GOP does. Good riddance.
Now there's a wheelbarrow full of malarkey. Boner is about to get pinned in a corner with some mandatory revelation. If it comes down to economy or continued control by a corrupt financial sector, then you should invest in union gallows and rope makers... because that would indicate Treason. The show won't go on this time. When a nation is faced with going into a Black Hole or throwing financiers into it and changing course to remedy and restoration... our Plan B will trump his Plan B every time.
MORE ON MSN MONEY
DATA PROVIDERS
Copyright © 2013 Microsoft. All rights reserved.
Quotes are real-time for NASDAQ, NYSE and AMEX. See delay times for other exchanges.
Fundamental company data and historical chart data provided by Thomson Reuters (click for restrictions). Real-time quotes provided by BATS Exchange. Real-time index quotes and delayed quotes supplied by Interactive Data Real-Time Services. Fund summary, fund performance and dividend data provided by Morningstar Inc. Analyst recommendations provided by Zacks Investment Research. StockScouter data provided by Verus Analytics. IPO data provided by Hoover's Inc. Index membership data provided by SIX Financial Information.
Japanese stock price data provided by Nomura Research Institute Ltd.; quotes delayed 20 minutes. Canadian fund data provided by CANNEX Financial Exchanges Ltd.
LATEST POSTS
The auto parts giant beats Wall Street expectations, while continuing to expand its stores in the U.S. and Mexico.
FIDELITY VIEWPOINTS
- How to sell covered calls - Fidelity Investments
- Savvy year-end tax moves to consider now - Fidelity Investments
- Seven ways to prepare for tax changes
- Five reasons an annual review is crucial - Fidelity Investments
- Take a look at mid caps now - Fidelity Investments
- State of the sector: Health care - Fidelity Investments
VIDEO ON MSN MONEY
ABOUT
Top Stocks provides analysis about the most noteworthy stocks in the market each day, combining some of the best content from around the MSN Money site and the rest of the Web.
Contributors include professional investors and journalists affiliated with MSN Money.
Follow us on Twitter @topstocksmsn.

