Sharesmagazine
 Home   Log In   Register   Our Services   My Account   Contact   Help 
 Stockwatch   Level 2   Portfolio   Charts   Share Price   Awards   Market Scan   Videos   Broker Notes   Director Deals   Traders' Room 
 Funds   Trades   Terminal   Alerts   Heatmaps   News   Indices   Forward Diary   Forex Prices   Shares Magazine   Investors' Room 
 CFDs   Shares   SIPPs   ISAs   Forex   ETFs   Comparison Tables   Spread Betting 
You are NOT currently logged in
 
Register now or login to post to this thread.

Woolworths - takeover bid strategy - a very interesting read... (WLW)     

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.

mitzy - 08 Jul 2008 11:13 - 354 of 581

Sell down another 5% today UK officialy in recession.

scotinvestor - 08 Jul 2008 23:46 - 355 of 581

did anyone in uk really need media etc to tell us that.......we can all feel it financially!

halifax - 09 Jul 2008 15:14 - 356 of 581

Anybody know who Ardeshir Naghshineh is RNS states he has increased his shareholding to 80million (5.48%)?

moneyplus - 09 Jul 2008 15:20 - 357 of 581

looking v interesting now.

blackdown - 10 Jul 2008 07:48 - 358 of 581

Which is more than you can say for their retail outlets.

mitzy - 13 Jul 2008 12:37 - 359 of 581

Sell.

moneyplus - 13 Jul 2008 14:29 - 360 of 581

from the other side---if wlw closed down all their retail outlets they would still gross more in a year from their entertainment arm than the mkt cap of the co.---someone must be running a slide over this co. some very large chunks being picked up for a reason--I Hope!

Clocktower - 14 Jul 2008 12:06 - 361 of 581

Have the shorters now finnished?

Like moneyplus , a bid must be near at these levels.

blackdown - 14 Jul 2008 13:58 - 362 of 581

Why?

poo bear - 14 Jul 2008 16:42 - 363 of 581

Why?

Because 2Entertain is worth 16p alone it's the best buy one get one free WLW have ever done.

mitzy - 29 Jul 2008 10:11 - 364 of 581

Looks like 5p this week ..incredible.

driver - 29 Jul 2008 10:38 - 365 of 581

Is this now cheap the fact that they are hanging on to 2Entertain does that matter?

Its 40 percent stake in 2 entertain, its successful DVD publishing joint venture with BBC Worldwide.
Some analysts had estimated the stake to be worth up to 200 million pounds -- more than double the group's current market capitalisation.

hangon - 29 Jul 2008 12:29 - 366 of 581

It's a sillty situation for WLW to be in, but every RNS seems to tell the Market things can get worse...and they do!

Until some Umph is put into each store with help for customers (and raising prices by offering products with that "extra") - I cannot see things improving. Store sales are a good thing, as the new owner will pay dearly. It's a shame WLW cannot do the same on the floor before it came to be sold.

This is a share-buying op, but even with a new Exec it will be some time before he can turn this hulk from drifting close to the rocks. Recent moves are shifting stock, but I can't see this is sustainable - we need profits and I've consistently told them how - but they prefer the present status ... so no changes yet awhile!

Fortunately customers are quite happy with the store, only recently a long queue only lost two - the Till wasn't working and only the spotty child knew where the reset-key was. Their plants remain a disgrace...being priced at 4 (nearly), yet showing zero signs of life, although the wrapping was still quite fresh. The Manager told me they return the dead plants to the supplier - shouldn't such incompetance be illegal? - putting a strain on the producer who nourished this plant for a year only to have indifferent staff snuff it out? Think of the plant-miles....makes my blood boil. Grr! and double Grr!

driver - 29 Jul 2008 13:41 - 367 of 581

Not looking good a lot of money has been lost on the other side and they are well p**ted off.



REUTERS UPDATE 1-Woolworths hits new low after profit warning [HYBWMHM]

(Adds company, analyst comments, shares, detail, background)
LONDON, July 29 (Reuters) - British sweets-to-DVDs retailer Woolworths issued a profit warning, blaming a marked downturn in trading conditions, and scrapped plans to sell out of DVD publisher 2 entertain, sending its shares to a new low.

The 100-year-old group, which last month agreed to part company with Chief Executive Trevor Bish-Jones, said on Tuesday it planned to rebuild its retail business around its more profitable small and medium sized stores.

But analysts said it faced an uphill struggle.

"Woolworths trading statement is dreadful," said Panmure's Philip Dorgan. "Any talent thinking about taking the (chief executive) job will doubtless be unimpressed by the board's strategic review."

Panmure's Dorgan pencilled in a first-half loss of 75 million pounds and a break-even result for the full year, adding the group was unlikely to pay a dividend.

Chairman Richard North said plans to focus on small and medium-sized stores did not mean the group was looking to shrink or to sell off larger premises.

Woolworths recently sold four stores to supermarket group Waitrose and when asked whether more such deals could happen, North said: "Not in the next few months. But who knows?"

moneyplus - 29 Jul 2008 15:28 - 368 of 581

I'm well p====d off too!! stuck with them now long term I suppose.

hangon - 30 Jul 2008 13:45 - 369 of 581

Seems to me all WLW Execs could be culled, say one a year - AND no-one would notice!....but their issues are at store-level, albeit with some stock issues. I can't see staff being pleased they;re employed by the Bottom Retailler....doesn't look good on the CV...Eh?
Whatever the reasons, the Execs are too well paid and probably don't care sufficiently to do anything. After-all it has been their decisions that got us here.... remember 40p.?...LOL.

moneyman - 10 Aug 2008 23:17 - 370 of 581

Interesting

http://new.eveningnews24.co.uk/content/News/story.aspx?brand=ENOnline&category=News&tBrand=enonline&tCategory=news&itemid=NOED09%20Aug%202008%2007%3A36%3A45%3A567

hangon - 12 Aug 2008 17:29 - 371 of 581

Steve Johnson appointed with super Options like he'll be really rich if the sp rises to 12p and overloaded with Gold if they reqch 20p ( pretty generous, since the Music business is worth several-times the current sp, lets's call it 15p ).
So this is a no-brainer....that only T B-J would not achieve...obviously.

Anywhay the Market has marked the sp down - Ho!- Ho!- Ho!

Did shareholders have a hand in this appointment?
Rather too generous, methinks.
What a way to run a business!
So, I think I may stop going into their stores, as of now.

The only "good-point" is that SJ was instrumental ( they say!), in turning round Focus - the DIY store. But that was some while ago....and WLW needs some drive+passion rather than "giving-away" the family silver.

Certainly it will be interesting to see what changes he announces......just a shame about the sp...does the Market dislike the deal as much as I?
EDIT 13 Aug08:- down a further 5% early trade....I note Blackdown's comment (here)....so maybe Focus "recovery" was no-more than a firesale...and any daft B****g can do that, just press the "Sell" button. The Market reaction is saying he ISN'T the person required.

blackdown - 13 Aug 2008 07:50 - 372 of 581

Focus was sold for 1. That's probably about 50p more than Woolies is worth.

moneyman - 15 Aug 2008 20:34 - 373 of 581

Oh dear GREAT NEWS

http://www.mcvuk.com/news/31520/EUK-takes-grip-on-channel
Register now or login to post to this thread.