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Obama, Romney campaigns expected to each top $1 billion mark in fundraising

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Both candidates will be backed by outside groups, but GOP-allied super PACs had a significant cash advantage over their Democratic counterparts for the final leg of the race.

Priorities USA Action, the super PAC backing Obama, raised $13 million during the first half of October. More than half of its haul came from just seven donors giving $1 million each, including financier George Soros and Mark Pincus, chief executive of online game company Zynga. The group spent $10.2 million and had $10.1 million in the bank.

Meanwhile, the pro-Romney group Restore Our Future raised $20 million, with half its take coming from casino magnate and prolific Republican donor Sheldon Adelson and his wife, Miriam, who each wrote $5 million checks a week apart.

In all, Adelson has suggested he could spend more than $100 million in the 2012 campaign. Together with his family, he has given at least $46.5 million in donations to groups that disclose their donations, according to campaign finance reports.

Restore Our Future also collected $1 million a piece from a quartet of donors: Jerry Perenchio, former chief of Spanish-language media company Univision; Julian Robertson, a billionaire hedge fund manager; Dallas-based investor Harold C. Simmons; and Edward St. John, a Baltimore developer. All except St. John are repeat donors to the group.

The pro-Romney super PAC also benefited from a rising stock market this year. In June, the committee said it received stock worth $50,265 from Sean Feiler, a New York financial analyst and chairman of a group called the American Principles Project that advocates a return to the gold standard. When the committee sold the stock last week, it was worth $67,119.

After spending $12.5 million, almost entirely on media and direct mail, Restore Our Future entered the final three weeks of the election with $24 million cash on hand.

American Crossroads, the other major Republican super PAC, brought in $11.6 million, some from the same donors. Simmons wrote a $4 million check on Oct. 12, bringing his total to the group to $12.5 million. Perenchio gave $500,000.

Texas home builder Bob Perry and Robert B. Rowling, chairman of TRT Holdings, also each added $1 million. Perry has given $5 million to American Crossroads alone; Rowling’s checks total $4 million.

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