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- 29 December 2008
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Persistent1, its not a new idea and has been discussed before. the biggest dilemna is what price should BBI put on DBCT for purpose of floating? Be realistic in your answer to your self. Think along the lines would YOU invest into the float at that price.
If BBI tried to float it at say $2.8bil, the first thought that jumps into my mind is that they DIDNT recieve an offer of that much or more, otherwise they would acept it. Are you willing to buy in at an inflated price? Its a good idea and could have worked IF they went down that path from the beginning.
The other aspect is, assume they did sell 50% in a float at $1.4bil. most of that money will need to go to asset level debt reduction. Think if you buy a house do you inherit the previous owners mortgage aswell? so a 50% float will not reduce the corporate debt, we need 100% really.
Remember the "strategic" buyers view this asset differently than a retail investor would. The strategic buyer simply wants to control their supply chain to China, and possibly gain control of the asset in the long term in order to lower their costs of business.
A retail buyer would look at DBCT the way they look at a pipeline: as a way to get a tax-advantaged high-dividend yield with lots of growth opportunities for the dividend.
For something like this idea of floating DBCT to make sense, I think it would need to pay out a 10% dividend to the investor. Probably that is going to be hard selling the asset at a 12.5 enterprise value to EBITDA multiple.
If they did do a 50% sale at $1400MM, then cleared that much of the asset level debt, then that leaves BBI in a much stronger position going forward to pay off corporate debt. Because they clear $1400/$1806 = 77.5% of their interest expenses from DBCT, but retain 50% of the EBITDA.
In the big picture, they may still be between a rock and a hard place.