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I heard this when BHP was bidding WMC....Knobby22 said:Why would they, at this stage of the cycle
Be careful on your assumptions - Ducati has repeatedly stated that LIFO/FIFO policy alters cashflowreece55 said:Duc, you seem overly negative to almost every deal at the moment. You obviously a very educated person, but I wonder why you think that you are smarter than thousands of accountants and investment bankers doing the calculations on these buy outs. I would be interested to see what your valuation methodology thought of BHP's acquisition of WMC.
haemitite said:Be careful on your assumptions - Ducati has repeatedly stated that LIFO/FIFO policy alters cashflow
And he has confused project capex with ongoing operating costs
Not to mention he thinks BHP is a sell because of its book depreciation.
haemitite said:Reece, I didn't think you were having a go at him
Ducati is welcome to his very bearish position - but a fundamentalist he isn't. He banged on for ages about BHP's accounting policy impacting cashflow.
As for burning cash, well many BHP shareholders will be enjoying a nice franked dividend and an enticing capital loss soon. And BHP won't be going anywhere near Alcoa
ducati916 said:The nice easy explanation.
Depreciation is a non-cash charge.
Thus depreciation increases cash-flow.
Depreciation, to accurately state cash-flow, must be deducted.
jog on
d998
Depreciation is a non cash item -> it does not increase cashflowducati916 said:The nice easy explanation.
Depreciation is a non-cash charge.
Thus depreciation increases cash-flow.
Depreciation, to accurately state cash-flow, must be deducted.
rederob said:Am up about 12% since buying BHP in December, which is a reasonable outcome in a few months.
Again, the commodity doomsayers are found to have misjudged the market.
ducati is welcome to present his cumbersome valuations and accompanying incongruent jargon, but its value remains elusive given his additional capacity for significant error.
It is all good and well to announce the "sky is falling" and have the Chicken Littles of the world worrying the bejeebers out of everyone - if the sky is indeed falling.
BHP is just a few dollars away from blue sky again and has the capacity to fly even further if broad-based commodity market tightness can again put a strangle on copper prices.
If I was a WPL executive at the moment, I would be looking at where BHP might place me on the corporate ladder. Or be looking for another corporate opportunity.
Unless Regan doubles as a BHP executive then his comments are as credible as the original speculation.Bush Trader said:More news on the Alcoa takeover rumour, James Regan of Reuters, commented yesterday that BHP “had no plans to have a go at Alcoa”. It will be interesting to see if the market continues to speculate.
Cheers
haemitite said:Depreciation is a non cash item -> it does not increase cashflow
And perhaps by now you may have realised that book depreciation and tax depreciation are different beasts
michael_selway said:Hi not bad BHP
Earnings and Dividends Forecast (cents per share)
2006 2007 2008 2009
EPS 225.4 286.0 299.8 287.8
DPS 48.4 54.9 57.5 60.4
thx
MS
BSD said:Hills up 2% in London ATM
The next massive catalyst is the ASX buy back completing.
Company buys $3billion of shares back at massive discount and sellers rush to buy-back vended shares on market.
More broker upgrades coming into an already cheap stock to fuel the fire.
BSD said:Sorry Hector
BHP is often referred to as 'Hills"
Broken Hill Proprietary Company
Those 2000 shares should be worth a bit more tomorrow
Good luck
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