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From: | "hugh webber" <hugh.webber@clear.net.nz> |
Date: | Tue, 19 Jun 2001 20:22:59 +1200 |
Well the report arrived yesterday and I've read it and its a classic in its own way. Its an object lesson in a behavioural problem; company executives want to build an Empire - bigger is better whatever the cost. But the shareholder's interest is profitability - don't do it unless it increases net profit per share. At the same time I've been glancing at the special report to shareholders on the takeover of Shortland Properties to confirm my suspicions - and they're confirmed. All the bad things in the present report come directly from the takeover. City Tower, the overrented and overvalued problem in Wgton came from Shortland. Oracle Tower and Shortland Towers the underlet problems in Auckland came from Shortland. All the alleged positive points (they didn't mention any of the negative ones) in the Shortland document have turned to custard e.g. they promised that Shortland would raise earnings and dividends - it has, from overrenting.....for just one year. But its then dumped earnings and dividends down below what they would have been if they hadn't made the silly ego trip takeover. I note that the operating profit is up only because the IRD tax take is down otherwise it would be the same operating profit as last year.. The two aspects that frighten me are (a) they don't admit the Shortland takeover was a mistake (b) they talk about further acquisitions (have they learnt their lesson? will they only buy acquisitions which permanently increase net earnings per share?). That said they look more stable than they have at any time since the takeover; They're paying off debt at $10 million a year, they're letting out the vacant property quite rapidly (I haven't looked at what rent aspect yet). What they need is stability, ot self destructive takeovers, and to finish letting out the unlet property. Keep heir eye on the ball. It would have been nice to have had more realistic disclosure at the outset when they floated about overrenting as 2 of the 4 cases of overrenting were from Shortland incl the biggest one but two were there in the portfolio floated. KIP, with the biggest property portfolio in NZ managed an upward revaluation this year of several million and a significant rise in earnings per share. Unfortunately they don't give projections but I can't quite see why they have to reduce dividend per share unless they have earmarked more revenue per share to inance cquisitions. Sigh. Who can you trust to look after the shareholders interest if he directors refuse to but go on ego trips instead... Um, really, I hate to say it but it looks as if they didn't bother doing their homework/due diligence on Shortland Properties. Maybe they were left high and dry when Russell McVeagh pulled the plug on its occupancy of Shortland Tower II - didn't they look at the tenancy agreement? didn't they bother getting an undertaking concerning it? Did they not have any legal remedy? Maybe you can argue all those away but they must have been quite capable of seeing that City Tower and the other Wellington property were substantially overrented and that Oracle in Auckland was fairly vacant and that the Auckland commercial property market for renting was quite tight. They also seem rather surprised that another party built some more office space in Auckland. Reminds me of BIL boasting how it had the hotel market in London all sewn up. Then some cad converted offices to hotels. There was another bidder for Shortland - why didn't they just let them win and pull down the other party's results instead of outbidding them? The thrill of battle; the thrill of being a bigger frog in the pond. My company is bigger than your company - Nyeh Nyeh Nyeh. But my company is more profitable per share than your company even if my company is smaller than your company (because my coy is smaller than your coy?) is the one that counts. Professional compay directors? Pshaw - high school entrants in the Business Game would have done better than that. (disclosure; sold my Cap Props earlier this year but my wife still holds some. Still like the quarterly high gross yield dividends - if only the directors didn't now have a credibility gap). cheers, Hugh ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 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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