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From: | "tennyson@caverock.net.nz" <tennyson@caverock.net.nz> |
Date: | Mon, 17 Jul 2000 15:17:32 +0000 |
It was good to see the announcement of another 'Stocktake' article. Very few such announcements get me to visit the 'sharechat' website faster! Frank seemed almost apologetic that given his last PRG article, the market has not reflected the value of Pacific Retail Group as he may have seen in it. I certainly hope no-one feels sore about that. It is up to everyone in this investment game to do their own homework. Sure, Frank Fernandez has the experience, no doubt does a little more research than most, and presents his findings in a more articulate way than most of us could ever hope to do. But that doesn't mean he is always going to be right, and nor should anyone expect that. Besides I don't think the PRG story is over. And a 5% slump in the share price in as volatile a thing as the sharemarket is hardly a caning. Personally I found the Fernandez Telstra article interesting for what it didn't say. For a start there is the revival in the Vodaphone float, as Timothy Carling has reminded us. That should have the Aussie fund managers selling TLS to make way for Vodaphone in the 'telecommunications' section of their portfolio. Jim Wiseman notes that Telstra has an undergeared balance sheet, but this is a view that relates to the company as it is now. The picture may not look so pretty if the Asian acquisition goes through. Telstra has lost it's local loop monopoly, which I believe was another reason for this years share price downgrading. It hasn't got that back, and isn't going to. Then there are all those Mom and Dad investors. I think of the parallel in NZ with Contact Energy. Contact, from a shareholders perspective have done nothing wrong, yet their share price continues to languish. As soon as it gets anywhere near the issue price another wave of 'Mom and Dad' investors come out of the woodwork and beat it back. There is a similar situation in Australia where the 'Moms and Dads' are facing not only a paper loss on their Telstra B warrants, but a call on cash in November. So if there is any short term bounce in the TLS share price there is a double incentive for those people to sell before then. Lastly there is the venture into Asia, via the Hong Kong mobile market. Such a deal holds the promise of a quote "tap into the vast and seemingly bottomless and extremely lucrative Asian markets." That is the hype. The reality for most Australasian companies (can you name even one Australasian company that has managed to pull profits out of Asia?) that have been there is that Asia is a vast and seemingly bottomless receptacle for their cash. Ask yourself what influence will Telstra will have on Pacific Century Cyber Works with their projected 2% stake? It is great to have a vision of owning 40% of a joint venture that will dominate the mobile phone business in Asia, but at the moment it is just a vision. You can guarantee that others will have the same vision and there are no details at all about how much Telstra/PCCW will have to pay for the acquisitions to fulfil this paper plan. To me TLS looks like a short term sell, and the current rally may be little more than the' buy on the rumour, sell on the fact' kind of share price movement that we have all seen before in other shares. However, come September/October when we have had another jitter in the NASDAQ, the Moms and Dads start bailing out to avoid the call on their cash and the sentiment has once again turned against Telstra -that- might be the time I get out -my- cheque book. All comments IMHO of course. SNOOPY Disclosure: Hold TLS, not selling, but not buying either at this time. --------------------------------- Message sent by Snoopy e-mail tennyson@caverock.net.nz on Pegasus Mail version 2.55 ---------------------------------- "You can tell me I'm wrong twice, but that still only makes me wrong once." ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.sharechat.co.nz/ New Zealand's home for market investors To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/forum.shtml.
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