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British Energy - One in a Lifetime Gamble Opportunity. (BGY)     

SueHelen - 02 Mar 2004 18:16

Buy British Energy
argues Evil Knievil of www.t1ps.com

British Energy has paid for many a lunch over the past couple of years. I have been shorting it aggressively Convinced that it was going bust I regarded it as the quickest way of making money since Cherie Blair and her ghastly husband turned freeloading into an art form. But, while the liar-in-chief and the wicked witch continue will continue to carry on sponging forever, other things have changed and I am now aggressively long of British Energy to the tune of five million shares. I admit my timing was not perfect - I am only running at break-even at this stage but I am expecting to trouser it in a big way over the next six months. In putting together this bull case I am most indebted to the publication Utilities Week - a must read in every household and whose words I have cribbed liberally.

The Bail Out

British Energy runs nuclear power stations. As such it has high fixed costs and always has a potential liability for decommissioning its plants when they come to the end of their useful lives. Its problems started when a slump in electricity prices meant that it was not covering those fixed costs which exposed the fact that its borrowings were unsupportable. It was this that allowed me to profit so greatly on the short tack.

Then the Government stepped in with a "rescue" plan. Surprisingly for a body which shows an ability to waste taxpayers' cash of unmatched proportions this did not involve a huge bail out. Instead it involves the Government, bond-holders, BNFL, other creditors and an array of vastly overpaid parasites (i.e. advisors on a success only fee) reconstructing the business such that equity holders will be diluted to obliteration. This motley crew are determined that their proposed reconstruction goes ahead and the board seems happy to play ball but any such proposal must be agreed by shareholders and I think that the times they are a changin'.

If the reconstruction proceeds, existing shareholders will be diluted to 2.5% of the equity plus warrants to buy a further 5%. Since 65% of free cash flow will be diverted to the Nuclear Liabilities Fund (i.e. decommissioning), this 7.5% becomes an economic interest of just 2.6%. This is clearly not an attractive proposition and if it goes through the shares, at 7.65p may be overvalued. However, I think that even on the current reconstruction terms, 15p-25p will prove to be the eventual outturn.

In the interim results, announced in December, and again with the latest quarterlies British Energy warned shareholders that if they did not support the proposed reconstruction by approving either a scheme of arrangement or the disposal of the company, the shares would be de-listed and the reconstruction completed anyway. But if it can be shown that the company is a going concern without the reconstruction, Turkey's won't vote for Christmas and shareholders (who have to approve any deal) will block it.

The Upside from a No Vote

The disposal of British Energy's 50% interest in Amergen, netted 160 million pounds. This repaid the 94 million owed to the Government so removing its ability to force insolvency by calling in its loan. It leaves three groups of creditors to be satisfied from the remaining 66 million pounds, the 20 million pounds of other cash, any cash flow from trading since 12th December and any cash that can be released from the 359 million pounds tied up in trading collateral.

Group one are the bondholders, owed 408 million. The 2003 bonds have matured, but British Energy can probably pay the 110 million pounds owed to the holders from its cash. The 2006 and 2016 bonds may be in default even though their interest continues to be paid. They are very generously treated in the proposed reconstruction, as a result of which the bonds are trading well above par. They may have the right to put British Energy into receivership if the reconstruction is voted down, but it would not be in their interest to do so. In a liquidation, they would receive very little, whereas, if British Energy continues to trade, they will continue to receive interest and can be repaid in full on redemption.

The second group of creditors are the Banks who lent 475 million pounds to finance the purchase of the 2000 MW coal-fired Eggborough power station. They are being offered 150 million pounds in new bonds and 14% of the new shares being issued, worth some 150 million pounds at 5p each. The value of Eggborough has risen significantly in the last year. It is half the size of the Drax power station, and, like Drax, is being fitted with a Flue Gas Desulphurisation plant, due for completion this year. In December, Drax's creditors rejected an offer by International Power to buy up to 36% of its equity and 15% of its debt. Since then, the value of Drax's debt in the secondary market has continued to rise, and Drax is now valued in the market at about 1.25 billion pounds . This suggests that Eggborough is worth closer to 600 million pounds than the 300 million pounds it is valued at in the secondary debt market. If the reconstruction fails, the Eggborough banks will be significantly better off whether or not the power station is sold.

The third group of creditors are the three parties claiming 316 million pounds in relation to onerous trading contracts. Two of the contracts, accounting for half the total, were terminated in 2003, making their claims payable. The third contract, with Teeside Power, may be renegotiable. The sharp rise in electricity prices makes this contract to buy high-priced electricity no longer a financial liability, but 158 million pounds must still be found to satisfy the other two.



In the short term, British Energy would struggle to satisfy these creditors, but given time, the prospects look better. 75 million pounds was absorbed into working capital in the first half of 2003/4, which may be reversible. The Board is "exploring initiatives to reduce the demand for trading collateral," which should diminish as the forward sales run out. Halving the collateral would release 180 million pounds.

And Critically...

The strength of electricity prices means that British Energy will be highly cash-generative when it can take advantage of current prices, and only half of output for the year to 31st March 2005 has been sold forward at low prices. Implementation of the Emission Trading Scheme, due to start on January 1st, 2005, could add a further 10% to electricity prices, increasing profits and cash flow by 160 million pounds per annum. What British Energy's shareholders need is time.

Fortunately, the bureaucracy and delays of the European Union are working in our favour. The EU is not expected to reach a decision on the restructuring until the middle of 2004, delaying a shareholder vote until the Autumn. With luck, if it runs true to form the EU will take longer, postponing the vote until 2005. This gives more time for cash flow to build up and for the prospects to look more secure. It also gives larger shareholders time to prepare an alternative plan. This is necessary because British Energy is firmly committed to the restructuring. Shareholders cannot look to their Board to safeguard their interests and indeed should think about handing out P45s liberally to the top table.

While negotiating with the creditors is the short-term priority of such a plan, there are other considerations. If the reconstruction is voted down, it is quite possible that the government will force the reconstruction through by Act of Parliament, leaving shareholders with nothing. But does this sordid little Government really want to repeat its Railtrack fiasco with an election looming?

The key to this gamble - and I admit it is such - is that electricity prices are increasing which makes a big difference to cashflow. If shareholders are given time to work out an alternative plan, British Energy will still need to raise cash via a rights issue but it is not ludicrous to suggest that current investors will be left owning 65% of the company rather than 2.5%. In other words the shares would be worth 150p each and possibly rather more.

There are obvious risks. The board might steamroller shareholders into accepting a deal that is patently not in the interests of shareholders. Electricity prices might fall. Big shareholders might cave in cravenly. The EU might whizz through approval giving shareholders no time to organise. Okay, there is no risk of the EU being efficient that was my little joke. But there are risks. If I am wrong these shares could conceivably be overvalued but could even in this scenario head up towards 20p. But if I am right 150p here we come. On a risk reward basis that looks good to me.

Key Data

EPIC: BGY
NMS: 150,000
Market Cap: 47 million pounds
Market: Full
Spread: 7.6-7.7p


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SueHelen - 30 Apr 2004 16:33 - 105 of 328

Looking jolly good for Tuesday. Very heavy buying reported this afternoon, a lot of Automatic Trades buys went through for big chunky amounts.

SueHelen - 30 Apr 2004 16:39 - 106 of 328

165,000 BUY reported at 12.3 pence after close. Something is brewing here. EK's 100 pence target may come, never know.

T Meditator - 30 Apr 2004 16:50 - 107 of 328

Yeeeeaaaaahhhhhhhhhhaaaaaaaaaarrrrrrr

SueHelen - 30 Apr 2004 16:56 - 108 of 328

Delayed 1,635,000 buy reported at 11.39 pence. From when the price was at 11.3-11.4 pence in the afternoon session.

Annabel - 30 Apr 2004 17:03 - 109 of 328



It may be a good time for all to take stock over the long week-end and get our breath back on this one before it takes off again next week. I have good reports from a retired BNFL friend that the future is bright.

T Meditator - 30 Apr 2004 17:30 - 110 of 328

The future is bright. Soon will be seeing some real FIREWORKS - I will be inspecting them on the horizon. LOL

mitzy - 30 Apr 2004 17:43 - 111 of 328

Hope you dont mean somebody will blow them up as thats the last thing we want.

T Meditator - 30 Apr 2004 17:59 - 112 of 328

Ok Fireworks is the wrong word, maybe Moonrocket is the way this is going to lift off, slow rise then whooooooooooooosh and away.........

SueHelen - 01 May 2004 00:52 - 113 of 328

Market Report: Bulls generate excitement in British Energy
Michael Jivkov
30 April 2004


What is going on at British Energy? In February, the electricity generator's shares were set alight by news that the US hedge fund Appaloosa a specialist in distressed debt scenarios like BE had taken a 4 per cent stake in group. They soared to 10.5p but were sold-off heavily after it emerged that Appaloosa had sold down its holding to below 3 per cent and made a quick profit.

Since then, BE shares have again been on the up and broke through their 10.5p high earlier this week. Yesterday they rose again, 1.3p better to a new 12-month high of 12.3p. Those buying into the stock believe that the company is fundamentally undervalued, despite the fact that current shareholders face a massive dilution as a result of the pending debt-for-equity swap, which aims to wipe out the company's massive borrowings.

Under the terms of this restructuring, BE's present shareholders will control 7.5 per cent of the company once the debt-for-equity swap has been completed, with the remainder going to its creditors. Ever since it was announced traders have been trying to work out what this arrangement means for the value of BE's current shares, and the consensus is that they should trade well above 10p and possibly as high as 20p.

There is a further bull case for BE. The debt-equity restructuring was hammered out early last year. But since then, BE's fortunes have improved greatly, thanks to rising electricity prices in the UK. And as a result, some investors now believe the terms of that deal should be renegotiated, giving BE's shareholders a greater slice of the post-restructuring company. Such a scenario, should it come to pass, would certainly send BE's share price sharply higher.

http://news.independent.co.uk/business/analysis_and_features/story.jsp?story=517029

Looking good for next week.

SueHelen - 01 May 2004 01:18 - 114 of 328

Could soar next week: ABN AMRO bullish buy research note coming next week.

Market report
By Yvette Essen (Filed: 01/05/2004)

British Energy was another talking point as the electricity generator rose 1.3 to 12.3p - its highest level for more than a year. Volumes reached 17.6m, compared with the daily average of nearer 3.5m. Market chatter said a major investment bank, possibly ABN Amro, is putting the final touches to a bullish buy research note.

http://www.opinion.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?menuId=243&menuItemId=2839&view=&grid=M3&targetRule=1&_DARGS=%2Fmoney%2FMenu%2FSideMenuItemsFrag.jhtml.1_A&_DAV=-1

transco - 01 May 2004 20:32 - 115 of 328

This could be a ramp on a massive scale.
Look at the graphs - when the selloff comes it will be savage!!
Take care!!

theendisnigh - 03 May 2004 22:27 - 116 of 328

This baby is going to take a big dive on Tuesday.
Once the big sellers come it the price is going south big time.
These are probably worth 4p max.

T Meditator - 03 May 2004 23:55 - 117 of 328

I only bought because I saw someone I think is Oh so Strong on the thread. Never mind the research. Bull!!!! Now!!!

SueHelen - 04 May 2004 09:10 - 118 of 328

Up 10.0% today theendisnigh. Up 80% since this thread was started.

foale - 04 May 2004 09:59 - 119 of 328

T Meditator - 04 May 2004 10:47 - 120 of 328

Those bailing out. Got to pity them really!!

rkausar - 04 May 2004 12:25 - 121 of 328

Anyone has any ideas what target pice we are looking at by the end of the week????

T Meditator - 04 May 2004 16:03 - 122 of 328

You little beauty.
Happy to hold.

Annabel - 04 May 2004 16:36 - 123 of 328

Getting out at 14p should not attract pity if bought at 4p Remember the great man who said "I never lost money on a stock I sold at a profit" !!! I took half to-day.

T Meditator - 04 May 2004 18:04 - 124 of 328

Good point.
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