Forum Archive Index - February 2001
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RE: [sharechat] Brierley's
holy mackerel, is that what they are up to? That explains the big discount
of assets to share price.
If management & board intend blatantly oppressing minority shareholders like
that, even if you stave off this manoeuvre on this occasion, there will be
others going on that you will never hear about. No wonder they shifted the
board off shore. It must be very inconvenient have bands of unruly small
share holders coming in to ask pertinent questions & enquiring into the
accounts.
The really big shareholders must have given up trying to get a return on
their investment by improving the company share price.
Worse than the recent Montana takeover waiver I would have thought?
-----Original Message-----
From: tennyson@caverock.net.nz [mailto:tennyson@caverock.net.nz]
Sent: Wednesday, February 21, 2001 2:48 AM
To: sharechat@sharechat.co.nz
Subject: Re: [sharechat] Brierley's
>
>I am a new investor and have some Brierley's shares and not sure
>what to do about this current offer - in fact, after trying to read
>the offer through I am totally confused - could someone explain to
>me if it is a good move to change to US$ or not etc. Thanks Flo
>
Flo, I guess you are referring to the circular to shareholders dated
9th February 2001.
The change to denominate the shares in US currency rather than
NZ dollars doesn't really matter. It is analogous to measuring the
temperature of boiling water at 100deg Celsius or 212deg Farenheit.
In both cases the water is still boiling and whether you measure this
is degrees Farenheit or degrees Celsius doesn't change the
temperature of the water. Just as measuring shares in $US or $NZ
doesn't change the underlying value of the investments as long as
those investments don't change.
The other resolutions you are being asked to vote for are a bit more
contentious. These are where the steam should start to rise from
investors brows.
Brierley are looking at increasing the number of shares on issue by
50% over the next few years by dishing them out as freebee options to
management. While the financial pie remains the same size this
means that existing shareholders slices become proportionately
smaller. The argument is that by giving management a greater slice
of the pie they will be more motivated to work harder. While this
is a good theory I do not believe it will work in the case of
BIL.
Firstly, all the senior management team is new and BIL has ensured
that they have been employed at internationally competitive rates.
So it would seem that you are now being asked to authorize extra
remuneration for BIL management at *above* market rates.
Since current Chief Executive Greg Terry assumed the helm of Brierley
Investments the shareprice has approximately halved. They have
reached the point where if the company sold all their assets and
sacked the management, the average shareholder would be twice as
well off as they are now.
The effect of issuing more shares options at current prices to
management is effectively diluting the future returns of all
shareholders. If the share price does not go up then management do
not need to buy these new shares and they are off the hook. If the
shares do go up then management and existing shareholders are equally
happy- or are they?
If new shares are issued at 30c, and the price goes up to 45c then
management have made a profit of 50%. Great for management, but cold
comfort for those shareholders whose shares were worth 60c before the
new management took over. If this scenario happens, then the new
management team will have destroyed one quarter of all shareholder
value. Most private businesses would sack such individuals for that
sort of performance.
In the case of BIL, not only would these managers be paid fully
competitive market salary packages, they would actually be paid a
huge *bonus* for their efforts destroying existing shareholder value
and (this is where insult is added to injury) all paid for by the
ravaged existing shareholders!
The BIL argument is that only 10% of the 'option plan' available
shares will be issued in any one year over a ten year period, so the
market price won't be affected, doesn't hold water. The proposed
50% increase in shares on issue is huge by any standards and is
simply a method of transferring wealth from existing shareholders to
management.
I would suggest that existing shareholders vote *against* the share
issue mandate and *against* the share option scheme. It would be
far better if BIL bought back their existing shares on market and
repackaged those as a share incentive scheme for management. The
scheme as proposed is an absolute disgrace IMHO. SNOOPY
---------------------------------
Message sent by Snoopy
e-mail tennyson@caverock.net.nz
on Pegasus Mail version 2.55
----------------------------------
"Dogs have big tongues, so you can bet they don't
bite them by accident"
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