ainsoph
- 02 Feb 2003 10:01
Holding these for shareholder discount and the belief that someone will come along with a plan on what to do with them .....
Now could be the right time to get in for a ride northwards with little downside risk
ains
Thread started at 95p mid - currently at a high of 129p - up 35.79%
Investec Securities took the stock off its "sell" list citing among other factors the potential for "corporate action".
Banks call in Ernst & Young to check out Thistle Hotels
By Lauren Mills and Damian Reece (Filed: 02/02/2003)
Thistle Hotels' bankers, led by the Royal Bank of Scotland, have hired Ernst & Young to carry out a review of the business which could lead to sweeping management changes and disposals at the hotels group.
Although Thistle has around 320m in the bank, the banks are thought to be alarmed at the group's precarious trading position. They are also said to be questioning the ability of the management to steer the company through a period of uncertainty in the market.
In January, Thistle revealed a 10.5 per cent drop in average room rates in London last year. It also refused to give details of how it planned to spend the cash raised through the disposal of 31 regional hotels to Orb Estates last March for 600m. As part of the deal, Thistle retained management contracts to run the hotels.
The group also admitted it would be difficult to forecast turnover for 2003 because it remained "cautious as to when there will be a recovery in general hotel trading conditions".
Ernst & Young is expected to report back to the banks on the company's overall financial strength within the next two weeks. E&Y is likely to focus on current trading, as well as prospects for improving performance in a relentlessly difficult market.
The accountancy firm will also advise the banks on a range of strategic options including further disposals.
Thistle's shares rallied 9p to 98p at the end of last week after Investec Securities cited "corporate activity" as a reason for taking the stock off its "sell" list.
Ian Burke, the chief executive, is under mounting pressure to clarify whether he plans to return the cash to shareholders or spend it on acquisitions.
His indecision is causing friction among Thistle's leading institutional shareholders who hold differing views about what should be done with the cash.
The two biggest shareholders, each of which has a seat on the board, are BIL International, which owns 45.8 per cent, and the Government of Singapore which has a 13.1 per cent stake.
Other large investors include Havelock Investments and Tweedy Brown Company.
A spokesman for the company insisted it knew nothing of E&Y's review. He also confirmed that Burke would update the City with a strategic plan for the group when it announces its year-end results in early March.
ainsoph
- 08 May 2003 16:27
- 226 of 251
I see they have 57.93% now
ainsoph
- 09 May 2003 12:28
- 227 of 251
New directors and CEO appointed
ainsoph
- 09 May 2003 12:39
- 228 of 251
working lunch doing a thing on thistle
ainsoph
- 09 May 2003 14:54
- 230 of 251
They will apply to delist and can do much as they please on divs - with the money etc .... very high risk imho
ainsoph
- 09 May 2003 16:56
- 232 of 251
That's not true ..... if they withdraw the cash offer the shares will fall and it's in their interest to let that happen
ains
ainsoph
- 09 May 2003 17:30
- 234 of 251
I think you will find they can delist before then ..... most advice is to sell now the board have capitulated and resigned
ainsoph
- 09 May 2003 17:42
- 236 of 251
They apply to the courts - it has happened to me on the odd occasion where I have a few tucked away somewhere. Last time it was script shares on Powergen that I forgot about
ainsoph
- 10 May 2003 10:12
- 237 of 251
BIL's Amarsi named chief of Thistle Hotels
By Josephine Cumbo in London
Published: May 9 2003 13:30 | Last Updated: May 9 2003 13:30
Thistle Hotels has announced the appointment of a new chief executive and chairman less than a week after BIL, the Singapore-based investment company, obtained a controlling stake in the UK group.
Thistle, which had fought the hostile takeover bid from BIL, said that Arun Amarsi, current BIL chief executive, had been appointed CEO and managing director.
Tan Sri Quek Leng Chan, current BIL chairman, would also take over the same role at the hotels' group, Thistle said.
Along with the appointments, Thistle said that David Newbigging, Ian Burke, Charles Mackay, Arthur Hayes and Baroness O'Cathain had also resigned as directors.
The board changes come after BIL declared its improved 627m, or 130p-a-share, bid for the group unconditional after increasing its majority stake to more than 50 per cent. BIL is hoping that Thistle's remaining shareholders will also fall into line and help lift its equity level to 75 per cent, when it can take the company private.
BIL launched its original 115p-a-share offer at the beginning of March. Thistle tried to fight off the approach by claiming the group was worth more than 200p a share.
Thistle shares were flat at 130p in midday trading in London.
ainsoph
- 10 May 2003 10:23
- 238 of 251
You wonder what success would be worth ..... it's a fing sad country where we pay for failure over and over again
Thistle chief set for 300,000 pay-off
By Alistair Osborne, Associate City Editor (Filed: 10/05/2003)
Ian Burke is in line for a 300,000 pay-off after being forced out as chief executive of Thistle Hotels yesterday following the group's 627m hostile takeover by its biggest shareholder, BIL International.
BIL, the Singaporean investment group which currently controls 58pc of Thistle stock and has declared its 130p-a-share offer unconditional, yesterday instigated a major board shake-up at London's biggest hotelier.
It saw the departure of five directors, including Mr Burke and David Newbigging, the non-executive chairman who will receive 60,000 compensation. Three other non-execs - Charles Mackay, Arthur Hayes and Baroness O'Caithan - also left.
Arun Amarsi, BIL's chief executive, becomes chief executive of Thistle, while existing non-executive, Tan Sri Quek Leng Chan, becomes chairman. Ian Durant, 44, Thistle's finance director, has been retained by BIL in the same role.
Mr Burke, 46, who joined Thistle in 1998, earned a total of 373,000 last year but, under a complex change-of-control clause in his contract, is entitled to less than a full-year's salary. Yesterday a BIL spokesman said: "He is being paid his legal entitlement."
Mr Burke will earn less than 10,000 from exercising share options at the takeover price, while his performance shares have failed to meet their targets. His pension is "under discussion", a BIL spokesman said.
Mr Burke resisted an intial 115p-a-share bid from BIL, which owned 46pc of the stock when it launched its bid. Shareholders buckled earlier this month when BIL raised its offer to 130p per share.
BIL added that it was appointing two new non-executive directors to the Thistle board. They are Michael Cairns, former chief operating officer of hotelier Queens Moat Houses, and ex-HSBC banker Thomas Robson.
aspex
- 12 May 2003 03:52
- 240 of 251
............and while you lot have been arguing over THO the BIL price in Singapore hits 84c.
Just double what it was mid to late April.
BIL rides off into the sunset...........
.........saddlebags stuffed with THO loot.
ainsoph
- 12 May 2003 07:35
- 241 of 251
Arguing and discussion are two different things aspex and it's easy to see something in hindsight. No one knew at the times that BIL was going to win and 36% is okay from mpov. seems to me that the regulator should get involved and maybe they will.
ains
aspex
- 12 May 2003 08:18
- 242 of 251
ains
I just wonder why BIL floated THO while leaving 45% in the pocket.
To me it means that they have always wanted to get back into the drivers seat.
Remember that the only reason they sold off any shares before was that they got caught originally with over 30% of Mt Charlotte and were forced to find money they did not have to buy out the others.
Then they needed to sell off as little as possible at 170p because to sell off more would have lost them the asset base of THO and caused banking headaches.
Anyway as that is well in the past,it now looks like the Singapore crowd are getting ready to poach some of the THO crumbs by making a bid for the rest of BIL.
see :
http://www.uk-wire.com/cgi-bin/articles/200305120700119458K.html
The above has been discussed as a probability for some time - as early as 2000/1
ainsoph
- 12 May 2003 08:30
- 243 of 251
I agree it probably does mean that ..... several bid situations were allowed to just fizz out. I think it's not a good situation for the minority and/or smaller shareholders and belive it should be referred. There is an enormous chunk of cash there - presumably they cannt touch at the moment .... unless they spend it.
ains
ainsoph
- 12 May 2003 16:25
- 244 of 251
BIL now hold 61.17%
ainsoph
- 13 May 2003 08:30
- 245 of 251
Jake Lloyd-Smith in Singapore, Evening Standard
12 May 2003
HARES in BIL International, the Singapore investment group that recently took over Thistle Hotels, roared higher on speculation that it may soon be the subject of a takeover battle between two Asian tycoons.
The stock jumped 18% to 82 cents as investors savoured the prospect of a duel for the group, whose 627m offer secured full control of Thistle and its 24 London hotels earlier this month at a big discount to the properties' net* asset value.
Thistle's six luxury landmark hotels, including the Royal Horseguards in Whitehall, could fetch up to 670m on any resale, according to sources close to the hotel group.
Last week, it emerged that renowned Indonesian-born asset trader Oei Hong Leong had amassed 8.1% of BIL after it took over Thistle. Oei is a major figure in the Singapore market with a vast retail investor following.
In response, BIL's controlling shareholder, Malaysian Quek Leng Chan, boosted his stake to 26% from 24% through his Camerlin investment group.
Analysts say BIL's purchase of Thistle has raised its net asset value* per share, stoking Oei's predatory interest and Quek's prompt response. 'Oei is well known as a savvy asset trader with an eye for selecting undervalued companies,' broker Kim Eng Ong Asia told clients. Its sum-of-parts valuation for BIL is S$1.11 per share.
Apart from Thistle, BIL owns a 5% stake in Asian beverage maker Fraser & Neave, a similar-sized holding in Air New Zealand and property assets in Fiji.