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From: | "G Stolwyk" <stolwyk@wave.co.nz> |
Date: | Sun, 9 Sep 2001 13:31:58 +1200 |
Thanks for raising this matter, David.
When I bought my original shares and checked their
background, I was not aware that there were some 55 mill. shares under
voluntary escrow till Oct.5, 2001.
It is probably no coincidence that the Annual
meeting is on Oct. 3. Page 67 of the Annual
report refers to this matter.
The shares reached $ 5.70 at one stage and I
could not find a good reason for the fall to the current $ 4.40 ( at one stage $
4.10 ).
Even the DAD/ BCH merger should not have that
made that much difference: as shown in my posts of Aug. 22 and Sept.
7, I prefer CLH.
At this stage, I don't know how many shares are
still in voluntary escrow but I would guess that quite a few could have been sold at the much
higher prices.
These shares were allocated arising from the
reconstruction of capital prior
to listing.
The largest holders are all Directors
including the Founders. They hold a total of 52.9% of the 94.7 mill. shares
issued by CLH sofar.
That equates with 50 mill. shares and presumably
will be the bulk of the 55 mill. in voluntary escrow.
These are intelligent men and rather than slowly
dripfeeding any of them on the market, they would be able to place them whenever
they want to.
Apparently, they may not be in a hurry to do
so:
I have not referred to one Non Ex. Director on the
Board, mr. Bo Goranson, aged
64.
He is the founder of Abak, one of Sweden's
largest debt collection agencies.
He also formed the
Intrum Justitia group in 1984 and built it into Europe's leading receivables
management group with subsidiaries in 22 countries. ( I did mention that
CLH has the strongest Board, I have seen for many years!
).
It is always possible that mr Goranson may be
interested in a takeover of CLH at a later
stage. Or, will it be DAD/BCH?
Personnally, I don't think that too much emphasis
should be put on that escrow as it was a voluntary anyway and any shares could
have been sold at the then prevailing much higher prices
since. CLH is a defensive stock and its price is already
low, in my opinion.
Gerry
PS: My post of 7 Sept. 2001 mentioned that the 4
dominant receivables companies in Australasia are only
collecting $ 270 mill. revenue out of a
total of $ 600 mill. revenue
available. ( I forgot to add the word " mill." to $ 270 in that
post).
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