jules99
- 17 Aug 2005 00:52
takeover bid strategy - a very interesting read...
Should you chase the takeover targets?
In 2004 it seemed that every second high-profile firm around the world was either taking a firm over or being taken over itself. In the US, Cingular bought AT&T Wireless, for example, and, in the UK, Banco Santander bought Abbey National, and the on-off saga of Marks & Spencer (M&S) occupied column inches for weeks on end. But according to the investment bankers, we havent seen anything yet. Theres no reason to doubt their prediction. As John Plender points out in the FT, they know at first hand what is in the merger and acquisition (M&A) pipeline. And if they are right, its excellent news for investors: share prices tend to soar when bids are announced.
Take the case of Aggregate Industries. Three months ago, Sandy Cross of Williams de Broe tipped the building materials firm in MoneyWeek at 95p, saying that it looked a manageable size for a predator. He was right. This week, Switzerlands Holcim said it intends to bid $1.78bn or 138p a share for Aggregate Industries. Today, the shares are trading at around 145p - anyone who bought in November is sitting on a 53% gain.
So if this really is the start of the year of the deal, wheres the best place for investors to place their bets? There is scope for consolidation in all sorts of sectors, from telecoms equipment to travel, all over Europe, but in the UK it is the retail sector that is getting all the attention. Analysts have long been warning that British retailers were going to have a nasty end to 2004 and a worse beginning to 2005, and Christmas seems to have been every bit as poor as the pessimists feared, says Chris Brown-Humes, also in the FT. Higher interest rates, a weak housing market, record levels of personal debt, higher utility bills and increased public transport costs are all squeezing the ability and desire of households to keep spending. The result? A lot of our retailers are suffering and that could make them easy pickings for predators. Indeed, one of the only things supporting retailers share prices right now is the prospect of takeover activity.
(Article continued below)
Venture capitalists are still on the prowl, as is the Icelandic retailer Baugur, and Tesco and Asda might make a move on a rival. All of which leaves investors simply having to guess who the targets will be.
Betting on who they might be has become the latest City investment craze, says Simon Nixon on www.Breakingviews.com. But it isnt hard. M&S and JJB Sports saw their share prices rise even as they announced rubbish numbers as investors calculated this increased the likelihood of a takeover. Perhaps Philip Green will comes back and have another go at M&S.
Other possible targets include J Sainsbury, N Brown, MFI, Matalan and French Connection. But is betting on these firms wise? Debt is now cheap and plentiful, so potential bidders are awash with cash, but if the spending downturn gathers pace, that will change and takeovers will suddenly be harder to finance. And not all the dogs of the retail sector will be rescued by a bid. Some will just go bust instead. As Simon Watkins points out in The Mail on Sunday, some already have. Since Christmas, Scottish carpet maker Stoddard International has gone into administration because of tough trading at its key customer Allied Carpets, and fashion chain Pilot went into receivership as sales fell. These were both private companies, but the lesson is clear. If you are chasing takeover targets, make sure you go for firms that will survive even if they are forced to go it alone.
Woolworths is every inch a major takeover and worth following, a great opportunity if it materialises, the time is ripe once again -58p was recent target price.
remember Doing your research reaps rewards.
almoore
- 01 Apr 2008 14:19
- 291 of 581
woolies up 7% today sofar - results tomorrow
halifax
- 01 Apr 2008 14:28
- 292 of 581
Will the dividend be slashed,will the company be broken up, will WLW sell its share in the BBC joint venture , will Baugur sell its shareholding to raise much needed cash, or will the directors ignore all this and just carry on regardless?!!
tipton11
- 01 Apr 2008 18:31
- 293 of 581
how about 10% div tomorrow
halifax
- 01 Apr 2008 19:07
- 294 of 581
Tune in to RNS at 7am tomorrow and all will be revealed but meantime dont hold your breath!
required field
- 01 Apr 2008 22:48
- 295 of 581
I'm probably wrong....but I will be surprised if they don't cut the dividend !, by the way : I took some profits a couple of days ago !, (perhaps too soon).
tipton11
- 02 Apr 2008 12:07
- 296 of 581
oops sorry about that but 50% right !
poo bear
- 02 Apr 2008 16:17
- 297 of 581
I read 87%.
This is not attratcive to me now no spin off of anything.
moneyplus
- 05 Apr 2008 16:46
- 298 of 581
it is to me--I'm a contrarian!!
PARKIN
- 12 Apr 2008 11:40
- 299 of 581
in the Daily tele this morning they are recomanding a sell on the share
it reads as follows Sell @( 11p this weeeks price) sugests Cridit Suisse.
recent full year results from this troubled genral retailer were in line with consesnsus expectations.On an underling basis the resuls showed that the retail losses only improved by &6.1m with operating cost rations still increased. With woolworths depending on Christmas trading in deciding the full years profit ,the ongoing concerns surrounding connsumer demand are likley tonegatively affectley the share price
moneyplus
- 12 Apr 2008 12:27
- 300 of 581
thanks P but I'm still going to hold on--the value of one section of their multi sections of the business is worth more than the mkt cap at this price. They own prime city centre leases,linking up with somerfield, still pay a reduced divi and Bauger own a huge chunk and is waiting in the wings!! I hope they stay down for a while as I can add to my isa holding. I can remember when CKSN 25p and BE 5p were on their knees and I sold out----look at them now!
halifax
- 12 Apr 2008 18:08
- 301 of 581
Moneyplus you are quite right shareholders equity is 350m as per their recent final accounts and translates to 21p per share before any actual valuation of assets. The break up value is probably around 50p per share and that is why the directors turned down Baugur's offer. Sit tight and await a better offer.
moneyman
- 13 Apr 2008 13:03
- 302 of 581
http://business.scotsman.com/business/Terry-Murden-Tesco-now-discovering.3976503.jp
"We predicted mergers at the turn of the year and there are tentative talks involving Co-op, Somerfield and Woolworths."
moneyman
- 27 Apr 2008 13:08
- 303 of 581
For full article see: http://www.webuser.co.uk/news/news.php?id=254185
Wii Fit selling 90 per minute April 25, 2008
Nintendo's Wii Fit game was launched today and has been selling at the rate of 90 copies per minute in Woolworths, the store claimed.
Woolworths said that people were queueing outside its stores this morning before opening time to make sure they got their hands on a copy.
Wii Fit is a game based on aerobics that comes with an exercise mat and sells for 70.
"This is a revolution in computer gaming. For a game not targeted at gamers to sell in numbers like this is unheard of and is genuinely changing the market," said Woolworths games trading manager Gerry Berkley
Berkeley said that Woolworths expected to run out of stock very soon.
"Woolworths stores still have stock left at this stage but some stores will run out today and others will sell out tomorrow morning. We are talking to Nintendo about securing extra stock and doing everything we can to ensure this happens in the event of a sell out," he said. Article continues, see link above.
halifax
- 23 May 2008 10:04
- 304 of 581
RNS today suggests WLW may be about to make a decision about its investment in 2Entertain. AGM is on 18th June 2008.
hangon
- 12 Jun 2008 13:26
- 305 of 581
Grief, which side is the FSA-on?
Here we are looking at a 350k "fine" on shareholders for something the Management failed to do.....
What's worse, is that the inept Management has been drawing Salary since December 2005 when this issue was first raised. Does the FSA have so many easy-targets that it takes two and a half years to impose a fine......and I wonder how the fine is calculated?
Isn't this a tax on shareholders - for Regulations that no-one can comprehend...?
Disgraceful.
halifax
- 12 Jun 2008 13:38
- 306 of 581
hangon I agree but dont forget the "sloths" at the FSA need some publicity after the NRK debacle.
hangon
- 12 Jun 2008 14:59
- 307 of 581
I could agree, that would be easy
- but really it is more like the Regulator wasn't watching NRK...because they were wasting effort on WLW.
+I understand no-one was to blame at WLW, so it begs the question...if [WLW] shareholders were disadvantaged 30 months ago.... why compound the problem by "fining" ( or is that a Corporate Tax for unspecified reasons?)....this fine has disadvantaged shareholders a further -4% today!
Copuldn't they try to match cause and effect, say within a Month? _WLW has said it won't contest the Fine, because of the cost and Management time - so that's alright then...take the cash out of the shareholder's kitty. But it's MY CASH . . . . and I had no hand in the Market News errors.
A simple "sign our protest" at Woolworth's counters would elicit many of the Public to react against the FSA - has Management got something better to do? I wonder what that might be. . . . . and might make the Market react positivly. I suspect most folk see these fines as little different from congestion-charges, parking fines and the like - TAX on the Public. A Basket of chocolates marked ( "priced to pay for the fine") would give the Public the opportunity to see the fine....as surely they must, as a price-rise over the next year....
I think it shows a total lack of guts, by management.
Er, yet again they fail the tests put before them.
partridge
- 12 Jun 2008 15:16
- 308 of 581
Not a WLW holder (thankfully) but you are right hangon and the company cannot really afford it.Who gets the fine, the Treasury or the FSA? Wonder what targets they have.Pity they don't spend their time investigating and fining those who make use of inside information ( they do not say in this case whether they believe any use was made of the non-disclosure) - not very difficult if they were to apply themselves.
2517GEORGE
- 13 Jun 2008 09:23
- 309 of 581
hangon---- of course it's a tax on the shareholders, how often have we heard this water co or this financial co has been fined by the FSA, who suffers, the shareholders and the consumers, in the case of water co's our rates go up and in the case of financial co's, the returns (endowments) suffer. Who gets the spondulux from the fines? I have no idea but would guess some fat cat dipsticks. So it's an easy peasy for the FSA (financial squeeze of assets).
2517
moneyman
- 13 Jun 2008 09:35
- 310 of 581
John Lewis Partnership said week to June 7th sales at its UK department stores increased 2.1% to 46.1m.
This breaks a four-week sequence of falling sales for the employee-owned retailer.
In the previous four weeks department store sales had fallen 4.7%, 2.8%, 1.8% and 4.3%.
'An excellent fashion performance together with a resurgent EHT (electrical and home technology) led to a move back to positive growth versus last year. The 2.1% increase was particularly pleasing in the current economic climate,' said the retailer.
However, the outcome was boosted by a first full week of sales from the new relocated Liverpool store and only three existing branches, Oxford Street, Kingston and Edinburgh, and the johnlewis.com internet site were in positive sales territory.
Sales at the group's chain of 189 Waitrose supermarkets increased 5% to 79.6m.
'A good week's trading, where the weather improved through the week leading to excellent trade on Saturday (June 7) as customers changed to outdoor eating,' John Lewis said of the Waitrose outturn.
Total Partnership sales rose 3.9% to 125.7m.
John Lewis' weekly sales data is closely watched as it is regarded as a bellwether of consumer sentiment.
UK consumer spending has slowed sharply in recent months, with UK shoppers hit by higher bills and a weakening housing market. Sales of so called 'big ticket' items have been particularly badly affected.