I understand there are owners of BBi/Beppa who are keen to see the SP increase etc and derivatives of same lift their net worth but the chart says it all. Why get in until it turns around? A v shaped pattern is a very rare commodity and is usually temporary. Wait fo rthe base and upturn before committing your funds people or you may be left with no ammunition when the time comes to recover lost ground and further the advancement.
This thread is fast becoming a support group for the terminal imo (dont be offended, i am happy to be proven wrong in time. This is only my opinion and i am allowed to have one).
A chart is simply a graph of objective data; in your example it sounds like a graph of yield spreads. Are you saying the data are wrong?Only yesterday I was at an industry seminar where the spread between bank and sovereign debt was shown on a chart, for years it was reasonably constant, then went haywire in the latter part of 2007. This chart demonstrated an inherent weakness in charting in exceptional circumstances, ie the GFC.
If they haven't got the $700M in cash for the BEPPAs in 2012 and the BBI share price is too low, they will offer more attractive terms to BEPPA holders to roll over for another period. The Directors have the power to do that so this nonsense of massive dilution in 2012 is pie in the sky uninformed rubbish. THERE WILL BE NO DILUTION.
Unless BEPPA divs are paid before then I dont think there would be too many acceptances of new terms. Whats the point of accepting a high interest rate if it doesn't get paid?
A chart is simply a graph of objective data; in your example it sounds like a graph of yield spreads. Are you saying the data are wrong?
Well, the chart was just reflecting what happened with the yield spreads. There is nothing "inherently weak" with the chart.In the GFC it is a totally new ball game and there is no relationship between the spread so extrapolation using a chart is meaningless.
Well, the chart was just reflecting what happened with the yield spreads. There is nothing "inherently weak" with the chart.
The weakness came from whoever decided that future can be simply extrapolated from the past and bet his house on it.
Secondly you have to think that BBI management are hopelessly incompetent. Why buy assets that deliver returns that are worse than you can get by putting your money in the bank at 4.5% interest? This is not to say that the assets are of poor quality, just that management horribly overpaid, the cash generation ability of the assets does not justify the price paid for them. If BBI had paid sensible prices for assets that produced good returns, they wouldn't need to sell-off assets.
Interesting that the company didn't write down the value of any of their assets at the half year.
BBI was one of the very few companies who did NOT "revalue their assets" UPWARDS in the bull market.
...
That's because the book value is "COST price + DEV costs - depreciation".
Out of curiosity, have you been buying up more units with the most recent sell-off below five cents ?Let them keep selling their BBI/BEPPA to me at these prices.
Simply, because they overpaid for them, or at least some of them as evidenced by their dismal returns and large amounts of goodwill.Why should they write them down?
BBI was one of the very few companies who did NOT "revalue their assets" UPWARDS in the bull market.
The auditors have been over them like a fine tooth comb and the result is ZERO IMPAIRMENT.
That's because the book value is "COST price + DEV costs - depreciation". VERY conservative and well managed assets outperforming in a global meltdown.
BBI's result was very solid. FCFx8 is 80c. NAV is $1. By any metric, the share price of 4.5c is very undervalued. I'm sitting on BBI and BEPPA. They are in the bottom drawer and they'll be sweet. Those who have faint hearts or wobbly knees, go and buy WOW.
If cash flow is not impaired, then why would the assets be impaired? These assets are performing. Look at the EBITDA figures. If people want to jump at shadows and look at every worst case scenario, then great. Let them keep selling their BBI/BEPPA to me at these prices.
That theory is swell for assets (like Powerco) that were bought many years ago (2004), and have had sufficient time to appreciate.
In fact saying that Powerco is being sold at book value or above, isn't saying much. I'd be very worried if Powerco could not be sold above its 2004 price.
However many of BBI's assets were acquired within the last year or so, at top dollar.
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