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Printable version |
From: | "Ben Dutton" <bendutton@sharechat.co.nz> |
Date: | Thu, 16 Mar 2000 07:40:31 +1300 |
Guys - Read down the page...the NZ Herald article is the seventh article in the NZ Market News section. I put them both in to get the two different perspective's... Thanks Benjamin Dutton ----- Original Message ----- From: simon dallimore <smndallimore@hotmail.com> To: <sharechat@sharechat.co.nz> Sent: Thursday, March 16, 2000 8:22 PM Subject: [sharechat] Air NZ deal is still on cards - Read NZ Herald and not SMH > Hey Ben, > The article you have on the front page of Sharechat this morning is from the > Sydney Morning Herald and is perhaps not as up to date as the article in > this morning's NZ Herald. Perhaps, to give a balanced perspective of the Air > NZ situation for investors, it might pay to run the NZ Herald story too as > the writer,Geoff Senescall has been very close to the action. Thanks. > [For the benefit of readers, the article in the NZ Herald is reproduced > below and my understanding from reading it is that the Singapore > Airlines/Air NZ deal is not in disarray at all and looks very much on the > cards pending Brierley buying up some more unrestricted shares to make up > the quota required by Singapore Airlines.] > Simon. > > Brierley clears path for Singapore offer > > 16.03.2000 - By GEOFF SENESCALL > > Brierley Investments was positioning itself yesterday to increase its > shareholding in Air New Zealand so it could deliver a 25 per cent holding to > Singapore Airlines. > Under the deal, which was hanging in the balance last night, Brierley needs > to buy a further 46 million of the unrestricted shares in Air New Zealand to > meet its side of the bargain. > At present it holds around 96 million B shares, which equates to 17 per cent > of the total shares on issue in the local carrier. In a telling move, > Brierley extended to October 1 the formal notice to Air New Zealand > shareholders, needed to raise its stake in the airline to > 60 per cent from 47 per cent. > Brierley first issued the notice in June 1999 when it initially tried to woo > Singapore Airlines into buying shares in the local carrier without success. > In the latest notice Brierley has also amended the price it intends paying > for each share to a range between 250c and 300c. Previously the company had > said it would pay between 240c and 340c for A shares and > between 330c and 430c for B shares. > The lower price reflects the recent weakness in the Air New Zealand share > price as the company looks to digest its $A580 million purchase of the > remaining 50 per cent of Ansett Australia it agreed to buy last month. > It also straddles the 280c price Brierley is understood to have agreed to > sell shares to Singapore. > On speculation of a deal with Singapore, the Air New Zealand B shares closed > at 249c after trading as high as 262c yesterday. The A shares closed at > 202c. > To buy the extra shares Brierley needs it can either stand in the market or > try to target local institutions owning B shares and attempt to swap them > for Brierley A shares, which can be owned only by New Zealanders. > There was speculation that Brierley might have already sounded out > institutions about the share swap option. But this could not be confirmed > last night by the Business Herald. > Brokers were sceptical about Brierley's ability to source Air New Zealand B > shares through a stand in the market without pushing the price through the > roof. According to Jason Smith - an Australian-based aviation analyst for > Salomon Smith Barney - the proposed deal made sense for both Air New Zealand > and Ansett Australia as well as Singapore. > "It makes logical sense, it raises the barriers to entry for new airlines > into the Australia marketplace and it does form what should be a stronger > competitor, on a three-year view, to Qantas," he said. > "But I would still want to emphasise there is still a lot of work that needs > to be done in the integration of Air New Zealand and Ansett, regardless of > Singapore coming in. It is probably going to expedite the integration > process but there is still a couple of years of solid work that needs to be > done before the thing starts earning what it > should be." > Mr Smith said it made sense that Air New Zealand had a large shareholder > which knew how to run an airline and was committed to the industry as > opposed to one which was an asset manager, such as Brierley. > "But realistically Singapore is not going to be sticking in extra capital > and how can they under the A and B share structure? > "But Singapore does give them extra access to systems, operations, people > and certainly there is some surplus capacity that is expected to come out of > the Singapore fleet at the end of the year which the > domestic and international businesses of Ansett would easily be able to > use." > ______________________________________________________ > Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com > > > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- > http://www.sharechat.co.nz/ New Zealand's home for market investors > To remove yourself from this list, please us the form at > http://www.sharechat.co.nz/forum.html. > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.sharechat.co.nz/ New Zealand's home for market investors To remove yourself from this list, please us the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/forum.html.
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