|
Printable version |
From: | "tennyson@caverock.net.nz" <tennyson@caverock.net.nz> |
Date: | Sun, 4 Aug 2002 21:55:58 +0000 |
Hi Jim and Winner69, In answer to your 'why bother' question, when the market is on the way down or skewing sideways often it is those companies that have no real expectation built into the share price that are the places to invest. If a company is hyped up on growth expectations, then pop goes the expectation and down goes the share price. Is anyone bullish about BIL? Not that I've heard, so no expectations to pop. All the historical points raised by Jim and Winner have some truth in them but I must ask, are they still valid? Paul Collins hasn't been part of the company for years now. The share price of the company is 29.5c on a preconsolidation basis, but so what? You have to look forwards not backwards. Jim, you think the NTA of Brierley shares is only 55-60 cents? I get $1.28, a fairly large difference, (see my BIL equation post). I'm not saying I'm certainly right, but I'd be pleased in you could point out the mistake in my calculation. Why invest in BIL rather than GPG? From my point of view the discount to asset backing for BIL is around 50%, vs what (30%?) for GPG. In other words BIL *today* is better value. > > >Jim wrote: > >Those still looking at the stock are better off getting >a few broker reports to read rather than attempt to make sense > of BIL's financials (NTA is around 55 cents to 60 cents) > or buying Thistle or Air NZ directly. > > Are you, Tim, accusing the brokers of not making sense of the financials? Why would you bother with a broker report that makes no attempt to look at the accounts? As for buying into Air New Zealand directly, if ever there was a share that is way over-priced it must be that. The idea of buying into Thistle directly and quitting BIL is not so silly. I might look into that in another post. You are wrong about Camerlin paying a dividend BTW. BIL paid a dividend of 3cps on 30th January 2000 with Camerlin firmly in control. That was a yield of 7.5% on teh share price of the day. It made BIL quite a good income share to own at the time (which is why I had it Winner69), without the benefit of foresight of what was to come! Actually I have to admit I didn't really understand BIL as well as I do now at the time. I do have some concern about Camerlin not being interested in minority shareholders. But I take heart from the fine print of section 23 in the annual report 2001, where it states that all options granted to Selwyn Cushing had lapsed and expired worthless. There was more joy welling up in my heart when I read that all of Greg Terry's options had been cancelled as well, and replaced with a new series of options that could only be exercised starting when the BRY share price got to $SGP1.10. Following the sacking of Terry, he won't be getting any of those either - marvellous stuff! I am no longer of the view that the BIL debt is the uncontrollable nightmare that it was. BRY can sell down their holding in Fraser and Neave over the next 3 years, and flick off the Air New Zealand stake to some plonking index fund manager. That would raise around 30c per share. We'll be conservative and say that only about half this will be available for debt repayment, as 5c per year will be needed to meet an operating shortfall every year for the next 3 years. The debt due to be repayed in the next 3 years is around 17c per share. Given that I haven't allowed for any dividends to be paid from Fraser and Neave over this 3 year timeframe, I think BIL have got their debt covered. By then it will be FY2007, and BIL will have access to the full Bass Strait Royalty again, the 'hidden jewel' that is hiding away off the balance sheet. If they sold the rights to this again, as they did in 1997, this will effectively clear the remaining debt. If this scenario comes to pass, by 2007 they will have become a holding company for Thistle Hotels and the Molokai Ranch, and have no term debt. > > >Suppose the next big hurdles are when a large number of >capital notes are due for repayment over the next couple >of years. Obviously some concerns out there when you can >get BIL 9.25% notes on the market at 15-20% yield. > > The yield has been like that for 6 months or so now and the BIL debt position has improved considerably. If I were a fixed interest investor, I might seriously consider picking up some of those notes at a 15% plus yield! > >Shame that so many old BIL shareholders are still holding >waiting for the glory days.......... > The day the share price gets to $4, the equivalent of the $2 pre-consolidated share price that certain BIL executives who shall not be named said it was worth, I'll be buying my ticket to the moon. I'm not waiting for a return to the glory days. Just pointing out a possible opportunity here to play about with an odd box of assets that everyone else thinks is a dog. When the clouds of gloom hang over a prospective investment and everybody else has lost interest, isn't that about the time that someone like Warren Buffet gets interested? Perhaps it is time to adjourn to the focus investment group... SNOOPY --------------------------------- Message sent by Snoopy e-mail tennyson@caverock.net.nz on Pegasus Mail version 2.55 ---------------------------------- "Stay on the upside of the downside, Anticipate the anticipation!" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/chat/forum/
Replies
References
|