It's not the employee's fault that the SP is falling? Are their problems 100% the result of bad luck?
If the previous post about a covenant is correct then it will be clearly in the employees' interests to not get bonuses. They are better off not having bonuses and at least having a job.
Well this is getting frustrating. All we hear from BNB is sugar and spice and how well things are going. And the market keeps selling it down.
I am finding it increasingly harder to believe that the market doesn't have some basis for dumping this stock. I don't think that the excuse of "market sentiment against financials" is as believable as some would like to think.
But doesn't Phil Green have a reputation as a man of honesty (unlike his brother Max Green who was murdered in Cambodia over 10 years ago for embezzling $40 million)Bear Stearns said everything was cool last week before it went Belly up this week... In this environment I don't think people will takes management word for it especially when your model is based on a lot of cheap debt.
does anyone have any recent broker recommendations on this ?
i have quite a few of these stocks and am getting really burnt by them..
it's so frustrating !!!
Thanks for posting the interview..
I was surprised when bnb did not climb back in % terms as much as Macquarie bank.. and then it gave up all the gains yesterday..
is 10 dollars a significant value for the stock price.. If BnB is only 50% geared.. then why is it being hammered.. does anyone know what the employees are thinking, given they own a fair chunk of the company?
Can someone explain to me look through gearing? It didn't make sense what was said in the interview. What is the actual amount of gearing of BnB?
Lets use a term deposit as a benchmark. If you stick money in one, you'll get about 7% interest. Close to 100% safe.
Clearly, this kind of unsecured note is going to pay a higer rate. But so much higer? An extra 23 percentage point?
Using a crude analysis, does that mean that the market thinks there is a one in four chance BNB will be unable to pay its debts (ie become insolvent)? Or even taking into account that risk is "overstated" in markets now, does it mean there is a one in five or one in six chance?
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