Religious shareholders will hold a 130 p

Klane's otherresponsibilities during his tenure at Capital One included overseeing thefirm'sinternationalactivities, a range of domestic lendingbusinesses,Capital One's direct deposit business, and all mergers and acquisitionsactivities.He was also a member of Capital One's Executive Committee, aDirector of Capital One Federal Savings Bank, and Chairman of the Board ofCapital One Bank EuropePLC (the subsidiary that provided oversight for allof Capital One's European businesses) Prior to joining Capital One, Mr. Klane ran the Corporate Trust and AgencyServices business for The Bankers Trust Company (including following theacquisition of Bankers Trust by Deutsche Bank in 1999).In this role, whichhe assumed in 1997, he was responsible for administering approximately $1trillion worth of debt and equity instruments.Mr. Klane originally joinedBankers Trust in 1994 as a Managing Director in the Global InstitutionalServices division, where he was responsible for strategy and businessdevelopment for the division and each of its three principal businesses.Earlier in his career, Mr. Klane was nominated by the President of the UnitedStates to sit on the Federal Reserve Board of Governors.Mr. Klane is marriedand has three daughters.SOURCECVC Captial PartnersJames Olley, 44-207-404-5959, or Christina Stenson, 1-212-333-3810, both ofBrunswick Group LLP, for CVC Capital Partners. Religious Investors See 2009 Shaping up as Breakthrough Year for U.S.Corporate Acceptance of Need for Major Health Care ReformRelated 2009 Shareholder Season Resolutions Expected to be Double Level ofLast Year; 12 Top Corporations Have Now Embraced Strong Principles for MovingAhead on Reform.Religious shareholders will hold a 1:30 p.m. ET national phone-based newsconference on January 14, 2009 to outline how the new year is likely to be theone in which institutional investor and U.S.

Members of the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility (ICCR), acoalition of nearly 300 faith-based institutional investors, representing over$100 billion in invested capital, will spell out how an intensive, decade-longpush by religious investors has resulted in more than two dozen shareholderresolutions filed for the 2009 proxy season and a dozen leading U.S.corporations embracing principles for major health care reform News event speakers will be: Rev. David Schilling, program director for human rights, Interfaith Centeron Corporate Responsibility; Sister Barbara Aires, coordinator of corporate responsibility, Sisters ofCharity of St. Faith-basedinvestors believe it is in the economic interest of portfolio companies toensure that all Americans have access to healthcare that is affordable andprovided equitably.ICCR members have urged America's corporations to adopt and publicly embraceprinciples for comprehensive health care reform (such as those based uponprinciples reported by the Institute of Medicine):(1) health care coverageshould be universal; (2) health care coverage should be continuous; (3) healthcare coverage should be affordable to individuals and families; (4) the healthinsurance strategy should be affordable and sustainable for society; and (5)health insurance should enhance health and well being by promoting access tohigh-quality care that is effective, efficient, safe, timely,patient-centered, and equitable.TO PARTICIPATE:You can join this live, phone-based news conference (withfull, two-way Q&A) at 1:30 p.m. ET on Wednesday, January 14, 2009 by dialing 1(800) 860-2442. Ask for the "religious investors/health care reform" newsevent.CAN'T PARTICIPATE:A streaming audio replay of the news event will beavailable on the Web at http:// as of 6 p.m.

ET on January 14,2009.ABOUT ICCR The Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility ( http://) is acoalition of nearly 300 faith-based institutional investors representing over$100 billion in invested capital. ICCR members bridge the divide betweenmorality and markets by envisioning a civic economy that integrates ethical,environmental and social values. 12/SOURCEInterfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility (ICCR), NYC. RCG RiskHunter(sm) Brings Powerful New Tool for Managing Risk in Today'sVolatile Market EnvironmentReal-time Risk Application Powered by Dynamic, Versatile Coral8 CEP PlatformCHICAGO, Jan. 12 /PRNewswire/ Rosenthal Collins Group, LLC (RCG), a leadingindependent futures clearing firm, announced today that it has developed andfiled for patent protection on a first-of-its-kind futures brokerage riskmanagement system.Based on Complex Event Processing (CEP) technology andscheduled to launch in the first quarter, RCG RiskHuntersm is designed to"hunt" out and highlight any trading pattern or behavior that deviates from aclient's or trader's historical behavior.The advanced technology will enableRCG to highlight prospective risk issues in real time across exchanges,products and the 24-hour trading day to allow for rapid response andamelioration if needed.Connamara Systems worked with the RCG technology team to develop and implementRCG's idea, bringing in California-based Coral8 to supply the CEP technology. CEP has been used in the military and other industries and is a populartechnology behind algorithmic trading.RCG RiskHunter augments the existing pre-trade and post-trade risk managementprocesses long in place at the firm.By operating in near real time aroundthe clock, the system closes the time gap that firms usually face between atransaction and the regular monitoring of profit and loss within and acrossaccounts.If RCG encountered a situation in which the pre-trade process didnot prevent a behavior that could put a client or the firm at risk, withinminutes of an electronic trade, the firm could understand the impact and takecorrective measures. "RCG RiskHunter is an indispensable technological tool that goes beyond ouralready robust pre- and post-trade risk management processes to protect ourclients, trading personnel and the firm," said Scott Gordon, RCG Chairman andChief Executive Officer."Throughout the past year, we've seen unprecedentedvolatility across the financial and commodity markets to the point where amarket can take a remarkable turn against a client in very short order.