|
Printable version |
From: | "Ian Andrews" <iandrews@ihug.co.nz> |
Date: | Fri, 16 Aug 2002 19:28:24 +1200 |
B.Bourke is demonstrating the flawed thinking which
characterises the more vocal segment of FFS's critics.
(a)
They have faulty calculators or haven't
mastered simple arithmetic. 22 cents is an 88% difference from $2.50; a
considerable difference from 500%; & B. Bourke, despite your
protestation, when comparing 88% with 500%, the difference DOES matter. i.e. It
is a material difference ( or one shouldn't be investing )
(b)
They can't distinguish an old Board Of Directors
from a new one. Of the 7- member FFS board, only 1 ( Michael Andrews) came from
the old Fletcher Forests Board pre-1999, which was the Board which made
the
major mistakes. The poor directors have long since
gone, but B.Bourke imagines they are still there.
This may sound trite,but if the current directors
were replaced, B.Bourke & company in all likelihood would also be
unable to distinguish them from the pre-1999 Board & Board
cleanouts would become an annual event. Where would it end?
(c)
They are shortsighted & are hard of
hearing. They accuse FFS of having poor management even after having been
told the company had an operating surplus of $79 million in the past year &
because this surplus was represented by cash & not book
entries, FFS was able to reduce debt by a similar sum. This Surplus amounted to
3.2 cents per share ( 14.5% of the current share price ), but this fact went
right over the heads of B.Bourke & company.
(d)
They have an out-of-date mental image of the
Chinese. Very dangerous. New Zealand is a lovely ( economist Gareth Morgan
calls it a "lifestyle blockl" ) but isolated country. This leads to smugness, which has us cling to paradigms of
countries such as Singapore, Hong Kong, Greece , Italy & Portugal
being having "inferior" economies to our own , when they passed us several
years ago. Likewise with China. A commitment to economic growth has seen
China rapidly joining the developed world. It is no longer a country
based on subsistence farming, whose businessmen are oout to secure maximum
short-term advantage from their relations with Western Businesspeople. I
have had business contacts with mainland China for years. China has
learnt how to do business with the west since taking over Hong Kong (
actually, it is more like Hong Kong taking over China ). I accept
developments during the 1990's have not been readily apparent to the man in the
street ( although they have to international businesspeople) & that CITIC
could have tried harder to sell itself, but then so could the critics have
done some homework to bring themselves up to date.
(e)
They think all debt is bad debt.. Debt is just
an alternative form of funding to equity ( do we want another rights
issue ? ).The proposal would have had debt increase several times, but off an
extremely low base. Ironically, had the Board been poorer managers & not
managed to clear $80 million of debt in the past year, the " % increase" figures
quoted by Bruce Sheppard would have looked better for them. The company would
have ended up with a 1:1 debt:equity ration, which really isn't all that
startling in the context of either the international forest industry or other NZ
listed companies.
|
Replies
|