Friday, September 28, 2007

Share Investor's Friday Free for all: Edition 5

Spin the Wheel

The start of the week saw a possible buyer named as the purchaser of Sky City Entertainment (SKC) after a “mystery buyer” was announced as a bidder last Friday.

Providence Equity Partners was named but then latter on in the week TPG Newbridge a private equity fund with ownership of multiple casinos around the world and a buyer of the Harrah’s Casino empire was fingered instead.

While TPG looks the most likely bidder, it looks like you could be more accurate if you used one of Sky City’s roulette wheels with just as much accuracy to find a suitor.

The final act this week in the saga came with a release from Sky City today that they were going to allow due diligence from the secret party and also actively seek other bidders. Shares closed up 17c today to NZ$5.22 on big volume of over 15 million shares.

The bonus laugh from last week though comes from brokers selling client’s shares before SKC shot up sharply in price on the Friday the announcement was made. Brokers only read the misleading headline of the announcement in which Sky City management “hid” the possible bid in an otherwise inconsequential company blurb.

Affected brokers and most probably their clients have been fuming all this week.

That will teach you to be lazy next time huh?


Slap on the wrist with a wet five dollar bill

Share brokers ABN AMRO Craigs were this week fined by the NZX for trading in shares in 2006 without gaining authorisation from the firm's compliance manager. In a statement to the NZX exchange, NZX Discipline, which rules on matters of market conduct, described the breach as "a serious matter."

ABN had been warned several times regarding the same breach.

In July the NZX Discipline panel's annual report showed that two broking firms and their advisers paid sums of money to the NZX this year for breaches of stock exchange rules.

The brokers and advisors were not named and were fined to the tune of $161,000 and $80,000.

The largest settlement was for Rakon (RAK) shares bought for advisors rather than allocated clients.

Another case named related to NZ Oil and Gas (NZO) shares that were purchased to “influence closing prices.” And brokers were fined a total of $80,000.

Makes me wonder what one has to do in this town to get an appropriate punishment for breaching “serious matters” when brokers go astray.

The old boys network keeps on keeping on and Mark Weldon and co have to take a harder look at breaches such as this to give the public confidence in a market lacking the bulls.

Perhaps the breaches happened late on Friday after lunchtime drinks. We could understand this couldn’t we?


Telecom Splits

News on Wednesday that Telecom New Zealand(TEL) was given concrete news that the New Zealand Government was going ahead with its original plan to split the company into three separate operational units.

The split will occur in March next year but take at least 4 years to fully realize. Where have we heard that one before, I thought Teresa had gone?

With internet speeds on average about 1GB per sec New Zealand languish near the bottom of developed countries for speed.

Ranked number one for speed consumption this writer speculates.

Countries like North Korea have entry level broadband speed at 24 MB per sec and more advanced nations are well over 100MB per sec.

Approaching Telecom reforms at dial-up speed isn’t going to get real broadband here anytime soon and it is one reason why this writer still uses snail-net.


Oldies not Goodies

ING’s Real Living retirement village float has joined AMP’s Somerset float that was cancelled last month.

Before the market turmoil of the last few months the AMP float looked like a promising investment.

ING had questions to ask about participants organizing the float anyway. Proponents within the deal were involved with dodgy dealings back in the roaring 80s.

A shame the AMP IPO went South, this correspondent was interested in buying a stake but I’m guessing that the other two oldie home retirement companies still listed on the NZX, Metlifecare (MET) and Ryman Healthcare (RYM) are going to do better considering the two oldie IPO’s are now dead.

Hopefully the AMP Somerset will go ahead in the future. Let’s hope for a resurrection.


Auckland Airport VS The Warehouse: Which one will fly?


Having taken a sizable stake in The Warehouse(WHS) last week, New Zealand’s largest listed general merchandise operator and also having a very small piece of Auckland Airport(AIA) I am left wondering when stacked next to each other , which stock is going to do the biz when and if buyers make offers that sellers cant refuse.

Both possible sales are not exactly straight forward ones, with AIA mired with local and central government impediments and the WHS weighed down with regulatory issues.

In October the case to allow Foodstuffs and Woolworths to buy the WHS will be heard by the Commerce Commission but the AIA transaction lacks any certain information with updates to the market few and far between.

In my opinion the Warehouse sale is likely to go ahead with conditions attached.


Buffett dines on Bear?

Finally speculation abounds that Warren Buffett, the world’s wealthiest investor, has been sniffing around Bear Sterns, the Wall Street investment bank.

Speculation of course sent Bear stock up strongly but stock for the company is trading at a considerable discount to its highs for the year.

Buffett of course is the master of the bargain, and companies like BS, who have recently been going through hard times during the market turmoil of failing sub prime loans might be a perfect candidate for some of the big man’s billions.

He has already got big stakes in Bank of America and Dow Jones so Bear Sterns would be a perfect fit in his portfolio.

The scenario described above has been refuted by contacts within Bear Sterns but who are we to believe?


NZX Market Wrap

The benchmark NZSX-50 index fell 6.91 points to 4268.90, on turnover totaling a high turnover of NZ$212.7 million.

Sky City (SKC) shares leaped today after the management announced it had agreed to due diligence by what it called a "credible" party interested in a potential takeover.

The company's shares hit a high of $5.41 before closing up 17c at $5.22, on turnover of 15.3 million shares. Other blue chips were mostly weaker, with Fletcher Building (FBU) down 17c at $12.69, Contact Energy (CEN) off 15c at $9.19, and Auckland Airport (AIA) down 3c at 313 .In the face of a continuing stronger New Zealand dollar, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare (FPH) fell 4c to $3.30 and F&P Appliances (FPA) lost 1 cent to $3.56, while Sky TV (SKT) fell 14c as it buys it product in $US.

Telecom (TEL) was up 3c at $4.47, as investors mulled over the Government recommitment this week to split the company into three units.

Air New Zealand (AIR) raised 5c to $2.47, following positive operating numbers for last month, and with shareholders approving its fleet purchase. The stock is running away from fair value with investors ignoring the market volatility of the airline industry.

Other stocks on the rise were Tourism Holdings (THL) up 10c to $2.40, PGG Wrightson (PGG) up 3c at 193, Nuplex (NPX) up 8c at $7.34, and Sanford (SAN) 5c higher at $4.35.

On the downside were Infratil(IFT) down 7c at $2.97, Steel & Tube(STU) down 19c at $4.30, Port of Tauranga(POT) down 5c at $6.70, and Mainfreight (MFT) continues its recent slide down 10c at $6.70.

Disclosure: I own SKC, WHS, RYM, AIA shares


C Share Investor 2007

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Reality needs to Bite

In 2002 Air New Zealand Ltd [AIR.NZX] was at one of its lowest points in years, although like most airlines it had lost billions in the past, this time its predicament meant the New Zealand taxpayer bailed it out via the present Labour Government, to the tune of more than $NZ 1 Billion.

The alternative would have been the entire collapse of the airline, New Zealand's national carrier.

Since then it has done comparatively well, posting acceptable profits and attracting large shareholders.

Its profits since 2002 though have barely got close to the cool billion that the taxpayer forked out to rescue it and on opportunity cost alone has lost a minimum of $250 million on top of that.

Shareholders, taxpayers and voluntary ones alike, need to remember that the airline biz is an extremely fickle one. One that is littered with bankruptcy, failure and many broken dreams, especially in New Zealand.

Long-term, Air New Zealand, like every other airline that there ever has been, with a few notable exceptions, has never made any money.

Air New Zealand's advantage has always been its highly profitable domestic airline monopoly that has propped up its less competitive international division.

While in the past this domestic near monopoly and at present duopoly has had a handful of half serious challenges by competitor airlines that have all failed, the latest drive to compete against the large bully incumbent by Virgin Blue looks set to be the most serious challenge to the big Koru yet.

Virgin has large amounts cash to fund their push, larger than any other prospective airline has had in the past. Virgin has challenged the dominant incumbent airline in all the markets that it has entered. They are in New Zealand for the long haul and will make it hard for Air New Zealand in the most profitable part of their business.

Air New Zealand will fight back hard though but will risk a backlash by the Kiwi flying public when they lower their fares to match Virgin's low prices. Realizing that they have been gouged for generations could be a bitter pill for Kiwis to swallow.

Air New Zealand's small International division, while making acceptable profits by airline standards, is still struggling with meager returns on capital and would be losing money if the cash they were using to operate was borrowed(see taxpayer funded bailout)like most other airlines.

The current profit isn't likely to continue for much longer as the pressures of international and domestic competition start to bite. Being such a small airline Air New Zealand is already struggling hard to compete with the lower costs associated with being a larger player or a traditional low cost operator like Virgin or Virgin Blue.

Investors in airlines seem to get wrapped up in the perceived "glamour" of the airline biz while at the same time forgetting that rather than eagles soaring their investment is more likely to be a spruce goose or an albatross.


AIR @ Share Investor

Share Price Alert: Air New Zealand Ltd
Queenstown Aiport Case: Air New Zealand VS Auckland
Queenstown Airport: Loud Voices & Loyalty
Long Term View: Air New Zealand Ltd
John Palmer Tipples on the Shareholder
Mike Pero and Air New Zealand: Capitalism vs Socialism
Rob Fyfe's "Environmental Extremism"
Reality Needs to Bite
Air New Zealand wants another taxpayer bailout

Discuss this stock at Share Investor Forum - Register free
Download AIR Company Reports

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c Share Investor 2007




Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Sky City Entertainment Group Ltd: Premium for Control

Sky City Entertainment Group Ltd [SKC.NZX] the New Zealand based casino and cinema operator has been under speculation of a buyout for about a week now.

A name has finally hit the streets, albeit still unconfirmed, TPG Newbridge, one of the world's biggest private equity funds, with links to Sky City's former operator the casino giant Harrahs.

TPG is in the process of tying up a deal to buy the casino group Harrahs and has also been busy buying up casinos around the world.

Owen Blicksilver, a New York- based TPG spokesman, said that the company would not comment on whether it was considering a buyout of Sky City, which he termed "market speculation".

My only consideration, should this speculation have wings, is the price TPG or any other suitor should pay.

Over the 10 years that I have been invested in the New Zealand Stockmarket, many companies have been bought by foreign buyers and usually at a very cheap price in comparison to similar companies and the sectors that they operate in overseas.

Premiums paid for control of good companies haven't been sufficient but hapless management have fallen over to big incentives and short-sighted business plans. Share holders have simply folded their tent for a quick buck and run to the hills to count their beans.

Recently, the bid by MFS living and Leisure, an Australian Tourist operator, failed when it tried to make a cheap play for Tourism Holdings Ltd [THL.NZX] the New Zealand listed camper van and tourism owner.

Recent bids by Dubai Aerospace International and a Canadian pension fund bid for Auckland International Ltd [AIA.NZX] have come at the lower end of valuations for control of a strategic monopoly.

In 2005 Waste Management, a listed New Zealand trash monopoly, in which yours truly had a sizable stake, was flogged off by management after they had been given incentives by the bidder Transpacific Waste, from Australia.

The company went for a song and profits made by the new owner since would be more than reflected in a higher than sale price share price today had Waste Management still been listed.

In Sky City we have a multitude of assets. Auckland, Hamilton, Queenstown, Adelaide, Darwin casinos owned outright. Part interests in Christchurch and Dunedin Casinos and well over 100 cinema screens.

The company's Casinos in New Zealand are a virtual monopoly with no more likely to be built and the Darwin Casino likewise.

It is true enough that the assets are probably not performing as well as they could and the reasons for that are many and varied but they are exceptional assets when they are well managed.

I don't have much faith in the current board being able to efficiently identify company problems and act with speed and diligence to get the firm back on track. Last weeks debacle over the announcement of buyer interest in the group was another decision that was handled badly and reflects upon the board as such.

Monopolies such as Sky City Entertainment deserve a premium when sold and full control attracts a premium as well.

For this reason management must be urged to get a decent price for the company and not fall for the first attractive bidder with long eyelashes.

Simon Botherway from Brook Asset Management has 8 Million shares in SKC and he and his company has been active in holding out for more in buyouts of holdings that he has had in other company's.

Large institutions like his could press for more should there be a concrete offer made.

I'm hoping any low-ball bid by a potential suitor is going to make him and others very angry.

I will be.


Disc: I own SKC shares in the Share Investor Portfolio


Sky City Convention Centre @ Share Investor

Share Investor discusses Convention Centre proposal with CEO Nigel Morrison
Sky City Convention Centre Expansion a Money Loser: Part Two
Sky City Convention Centre Expansion a Money loser
SKC Convention Centre power-point slide illustrations & SKC submission to Auckland City Council

Sky City Entertainment Group @ Share Investor


Sky City Entertainment Group Ltd: Presentation to Macquarie Group
Morningstar Revalues Sky City Entertainment Group
Guest Post - Michele Hewitson Interview: Nigel Morrison
Failed Sky City bid for Christchurch Casino good news for Shareholders
Sky City Entertainment Group Ltd: Christchurch Casino bid falls short of Investment Criteria
Sky City Entertainment Group Ltd: Never mind the width feel the volume
Sky City Annual Meeting & 2011 - 2012 Profit Forecast
Stock of the Week: Sky City Entertainment Group Ltd
Sky City set to lose National Convention Centre bid
Sky City Entertainment Group: Australian Acquisition on the Cards?
Sky City Entertainment Group Ltd: 2010 Full Year Profit Analysis
Sky City Entertainment Group 2010 Full Year Profit Preview
Chart of the Week: Sky City Entertainment Group Ltd
Share Investor discusses Convention Centre proposal with CEO Nigel Morrison
Share Investor Q & A: Sky City CEO, Nigel Morrison
Sky City Entertainment: CEO Nigel Morrison discusses 2010 HY
Sky City Convention Centre Expansion a Money Loser: Part Two
Sky City Convention Centre Expansion a Money loser
Sky City Entertainment Group Ltd: Download full Company analysis
Sky City 2010 full year profit looking good
Long Term View: Sky City Entertainment Group Ltd
Sky City Entertainment: CEO Nigel Morrison discusses 2010 Half Year
Sky City Entertainment Group 2010 Interim Profit Review
Sky City to focus on Gaming
Sky City debts levels now more manageable
Insider Trading on Sky City shares
Sky City Profit Upgrade: Always on the Cards
Sky City's Current Cinema "Boom" a Horror Story in Disguise
Stock of the Week: Sky City Entertainment Group
Are Insiders selling Sky City Stock?
Sky City Entertainment 2009 Interim Result Preamble
2008 Sky City profit analysis
Sky City share offer confusing and unfair for smaller shareholders
Sky City Entertainment 2008 Full Year profit results , NZX release, 2008 full year presentation, result briefing webcast, financial statements
Sky City 2008 profit preamble
Sky City outlines a clear future plan
As recession bites Sky City bites back
Sky City Assets: Buy, sell and hold
Why did you buy that stock? [Sky City Entertainment]
Sky City Share Volumes set tongues wagging
Sky City half year exceptional on cost cutting
NZX Press release: Sky City profit to HY end Dec 2007
Sky City Cinemas no Blockbuster
Sky City Entertainment share price drop
New Broom set to sweep
Sky City Management: Blind, deaf and numb
Sky City sale could be off
Opposition to takeover
Premium for control
Sky City receives takeover bid
Sky City Casino Full Year Profit to June 30 2007
Setting the record straight
Sky City CEO resigns
Sky City Casino: Under performing
Sky City Casino 2007 HY Profit(analysis)
Sky City Casino 2007 HY Profit


Discuss SKC @ Share Investor Forum
Download SKC Company Reports

Recommended Amazon Reading

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c Share Investor 2008

Friday, September 21, 2007

Share Investor's Friday Free for all: Edition 4

Safety in Numbers

The week began with Rabobank defying the depressed debt market raising NZ$900 Million after initially wanting to raise $400 Million. It just goes to show that quality wins out every time and money that has been pulled from shaky finance companies has found a new safe home.

Pumpkin Patchy

Pumpkin Patch (PPL) the trendy New Zealand children's clothing retailer, reported a full year 2007 profit slightly down for the 2007 year to $27 million. Revenue was up strongly but expansion costs, high interest rates, wages and other fixed business costs rose.

The Patch is bullish on expansion, especially in the USA and is expecting a better contribution from New Zealand and Australia next year.

10-4, looks like we got a convoy

Mainfreight (MFT) the ever growing New Zealand trucking company this week plunked down US $53.7 million for the US international freight forwarder and logistics provider, Target Logistics which is publicly listed on the US Stock Exchange.

Mainfreight Boss Don Braid said the transaction would provide Mainfreight with a foundation for further growth in the US and international freight markets.

The purchase will be earnings positive and continues the companies wish to grow the company substantially by clever acquisitions and organic growth.

Sales grow slowly at fast food company

Restaurant Brands (RBD) the operator of KFC, Pizza Hut and Starbucks had a better sales report this week.

The company today reported second quarter sales across its three New Zealand businesses up 5.8 per cent to $93.6 million, with same store sales up 5 per cent.

KFC sales were up 11.7 per cent for the 16 weeks ended September 10, compared to the second quarter a year earlier. Despite recent stellar sales increases KFC sales are still well off historical sales figures when adjusted for inflation.

Starbucks Coffee was up a steady 6.7 per cent for the second quarter from a year earlier, while Pizza Hut began to improve but still produced an overall sales decline of 7.5 per cent.

It looks like the profit announcement in October, which should be allot better than last reporting, will push the share price closer to the $1 mark, the market has valued the stock at less than a buck for most of the year, don't count your chickens yet though.

Can Canadians Fly?

Not content with just flicking through and buying Telecom's Yellow Pages, another Canuck pension outfit is in town to make a bid for New Zealand's largest airport.

The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board says it has come up with three options for acquiring a significant minority stake in Auckland International Airport Ltd(AIA)

They include an all cash option of $3.70 per share.

The other two options, which would provide a value of up to $3.90 per share, would involve a combination of cash and the issue of new securities that provided enhanced returns while preserving the investment grade rating of AIAL.

The market saw the shares increase in price to around $3.30 on the day of the announcement so it has probably factored in a likelihood that this deal isn't necessarily going to fly.

In my opinion, local and central government opposition will sink any possible deal.

Shame really, while Canadians are a little odd at times they certainly get my approval over AIA's last suitor Dubai Aeronautical Enterprise.

Time for a climate change

The nonsense that was the New Zealand Labour Party's Carbon Trading and tax plan to ameliorate the non-existent "global warming" problem hit Kiwis right between their wallets on Thursday.

The thirst by socialists for more of our tax money was outlined by David (eyes closed) Parker the Climate Change Minister.

Consumers will pay more for oil, gas, electricity and just about everything else we buy, unless they are low income earners and then the middle classes will simply subsidise these individuals so they can continue to pollute.

I am reminded of the failure of "fairy dust" schemes like carbon trading that have come crashing down in the past.

From the great tulip bulb craze in Europe in the 1600s to the Carbon Trading scheme invented by Enron in the 1990s. Both of these failed, miserably.

The taxes placed on our economy with the excuse of global warming by the present government are likely to do the same.

Waiting for the Ace Card

Casino and cinema operator SkyCity Entertainment Group(SKC) has received a takeover bid from an as yet unnamed party.

Seems an odd way of informing the market without really saying much at all!

The offer would have to be significantly over the current share price of $5.27 for my good self to accept any offer as it is part of my long-term portfolio and has been for 5 years and I own a very large parcel. In fact I went on a buying spree this week and bought some more SKC, as well as a significant parcel of The Warehouse(WHS) for the large dividend payout and imputation credit feast.

If you are a short-term investor you should probably run for the hills today but if you have bought this company as an investment then I wouldn't sell for less than 8 bucks, not that the offer is going to be this high.

There were rumours of Tattersalls and Tabcorp being the suitors but Tabcorp has scotched their inclusion. Does such a quick denial have any deeper meaning?

Thought Id just put it out there.

NZX market Wrap

A huge rise by takeover target Sky City(SKC) and a solid Fletcher Building(FBU) lifted the benchmark index today, outweighing a 3 per cent slide in top stock Telecom(TEL)

Sky City said it has received an indicative and confidential approach from a party interested in acquiring all its shares.

The news boosted the casino company's stock to a record high of $5.56, before it closed up 22 per cent, or 95c, at $5.28 on turnover totalling $96.8m.

Fletcher Building announced today that it had raised over $300 million in debt to cover bridging loans used to fund the recent Formica Corp purchase. Fletcher Building rose 3 per cent, or 40c, to $12.80

The NZSX-50 index ended the week up 0.6 per cent, or 24.28 points, at 4231.16 on turnover totalling $231.5 million.

Top stock Telecom(TEL) was down 13c, or nearly 3 per cent, at $4.29. Contact Energy(CEN) fell a cent to $9.33, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare (FPH) lost 4c to $3.45, F&P Appliances fell a cent to $3.57 (FPA) and Auckland Airport(AIA) lost a cent to $3.24 after rising strongly this week on a Candian pension bid for the company.

Sky TV (SKT)was up 4c at $5.52, Air New Zealand (AIA)rose 3c to $2.22, The Warehouse(WHS) gained 3c to $6.08, Infratil(IFT) was down 2c at $2.98, and Hellaby(HBY) was up 10c at $2.90.

Freightways(FRE) fell 2c to $3.68, Sanford(SAN) rose 4c to 4$.55, and Nuplex(NPX) was up 7c at $7.02.

Guinness Peat Group(GPG) shares fell 4c to $1.89 after the lifting of its trading suspension.

GPG recently quit its $3.62 per cent stake in NZX at a market discount of $9.50. NZX shares closed down 10c today at $9.50.

Disclosure: I own AIA, PPL, SKC, MFT shares

C Share Investor 2007