- Joined
- 5 January 2009
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- 7
I think all on this forum who are interested in BBI/BEPPA should read the Investor Pack released with the interim result.
How do you come to $1 per share for BBI in 2012? What happens if a hedge fund calls for and gets BBI wound up in the interim? What does BEPPA return if there is no BBI?
Not saying that this can happen however do note that a call for exactly this has been made by TCI for BBW to be wound up and the assets sold.
Just curious.
Paul,
I'd suggest you give BBI a call and ask for a hard copy of the Investor Pack. It's a lot easier going through it in hard copy.
I receive every report released in hard copy format.
I would be interested in your take on the Net Asset Value once you have digested it all.
Look at the "intangibles" and "goodwill". This is one area where I believe the market does not actually understand the true value.
Are you aware that Dalrymple Bay Coal Terminal (DBCT) is listed as "intangible"?
That is because it is a 99 year lease. A lease is "intangible". Things like this can confuse the average investor and even the professionals.
One broker told me last year that BBI's intangibles and goodwill were worth nothing. Yeah sure! If you rang a bell, that broker would think it's Mr Whippy.
Paul,
One broker told me last year that BBI's intangibles and goodwill were worth nothing. Yeah sure! If you rang a bell, that broker would think it's Mr Whippy.
BB - I will look further into the Net Asset Value and "intangibles" i think you have picked up on an important point there, i didnt think to consider the implications of DBCT being a 99 yr lease hold and the implication that would have on the balance sheet.
Most brokers have no idea. They will be saying BUY when the risks are low and the share price is 30c. ABN Amro were saying BUY at $1.30, BUY at 80c, BUY at 65c, BUY at 26c, SELL at 17c, HOLD at 5c.
You get the drift of brokers? They are known as "front runners". When the markets humming along, everything's a BUY. When the market turns to garbage, everything is a SELL or HOLD at best.
My only draw back is not seeing much of a buy recommendation by brokers for BBI. I've checked a few sources which say to hold which is promising, but considering all the points made by members here regarding asset values etc. I would expect it to have a stronger BUY recommendation. Any thoughts?
want advice from someone who gone down this road, when he start out and doesn't understand much about stock market and business model
Stay away from bad business doesn't matter how cheap they look.
Become an independent thinker and ignore all the noise like broker recommendation, newspaper and general headline grabbing article that scare you without proper facts.
Seek out techniques use by some of the world best investors and follow that you will see remarkable return on your investment and you straight away know what business you should put your money into
Here are some of the name to look up
Lou Simpson
Charlie Munger
Warren Buffett
Walter Schloss
Phil Fisher
if you don't want to lose money you can learn 2 ways
1. From reading
2. From someone else mistake and
I think Lou Simpson said that.
The journey to these timeless techniques and advice will not be quick, it require countless hour of reading and research but if you are not willing to do that...a safer place is the index fund.
This philosophy of maintaining proportional balance has never made any sense to me. Why wouldn't you let your winners run and allocate a greater proportion of the p/f value to them while they are doing that?On a side note one of the reasons my bosses broker recommended selling was that the portfolio must have no more than 30 stocks & each stock must be balanced to a set figure once a year and because the portfolio had more than 30 stocks some had to be cut for the sake of managing the portfolio. Although I agree 30 is more managable, it doesnt mean you need to cut the excess straight away.
This philosophy of maintaining proportional balance has never made any sense to me. Why wouldn't you let your winners run and allocate a greater proportion of the p/f value to them while they are doing that?
A friend of mine sensibly moved his shares to cash well over a year ago, but was castigated by a so called adviser for not maintaining the traditional balance between 'growth' assets and cash. This despite the fact that the 'growth' assets were falling like a weighted anchor on a daily basis.
No wonder people have little faith in financial advisers.
Lets not forget that the so called experts were the ones recommending institutional clients such as super funds take exposures to those wonderful instruments we now collectively refer to as toxic debt. Also if I recall one broker discounted the value of DBCT on the basis that property fund valuations were dropping....duh.
The best advice I have seen is when brokers say buy, sell and vice versa. After all the commission generated pays their bonuses and advising a client to buy and hold longterm does not generate a lot of commission.
Cheers
What is real is the share price.
Yep and we will see what the share price is this time next year. I bought 50,000 at 42c for a dip in the water. I bought too early. Guilty. What I did do then was have the courage of my convictions and extensive research to load up the truck below 4c in Nov 2008. I will not die wondering like some hey "select"/"macrae12". Good try old son.
Why did I take a dip at 42c last year? Because NAV was over $1 and a 60% discount seemed cheap to me. I thought the markets had bottomed. I was wrong and I wasn't the only one macrae12.
I have no respect for bit players who procrastinate and if they find negatives, call a stock a dog. Every dog has his day.
Where is the factual evidence BBI is a dog? Please don't tell me the share price as that would show your complete ignorance of how markets work and assumes markets are efficient at every day of the week. Give me some facts.
PS. You can tell your buddy moderator pals I will not be returning across the road. ASF is a class above.
What is real is the share price.
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