UMike
Klutzing in Thai
- Joined
- 16 January 2007
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Ahhh well I got it.....
A bit before I thought I would and it closed a cent higher also.....
Lets hope it all picks up from now. (with a divi).
CPA is facing the resistance of 1.200. The technical indicator at au.stoxline website shows a buy with the 1.402 target price in six months.
Also it seems odd that the Dexus approach is so close to the NTA of CPA. To go to the effort of organising capital backing for the buyout you'd think they would have jumped in with a "premium" bid to knock out any other potential buyers. More to come yet, I think.
Generally a serious takeover offer is at a premium to NTA of a few % to swing the deal. To me Dexus don't appear to be fully commited to their offer unless as you point out it is merely the first stage to be upped after rejection.Why would they go in with a premium?.
They already own a blocking stake so no other buyer is going to trump them unless it is at such a high level that DXS is happy to sell into the other buyer's bid. By bidding at NTA they are forcing any other dark horses out there to make a play at above valuation.
Don't forget that the DXS CEO Darren Steinberg was at CPA when he made the much maligned acquisition of the Grocon assets, issuing capital below NTA to buy office buildings at valuation. The market slaughtered him for that deal and he has gone to great lengths to show that he is not paying above the odds this time (note the detailed financial assumptions disclosure at the back of the ASX presentation which is not typical of a deal like this in the sector).
My view is that this will play out as all M&A for passive REITs in the sector does these days. First a bid at NTA, the CPA board reject it. Then a period of discussion where DXS then come out with a new offer a few cents above their original proposal. CPA board accept and look good for forcing the price higher, even though it is at a level which DXS was willing to pay in the first place. CPA has limited options here, they are too small to internalise and rival bidders have been scared away by DXS blocking stake.
Why would they go in with a premium? .......My view is that this will play out as all M&A for passive REITs in the sector does these days. First a bid at NTA, the CPA board reject it. Then a period of discussion where DXS then come out with a new offer a few cents above their original proposal. CPA board accept and look good for forcing the price higher, even though it is at a level which DXS was willing to pay in the first place. CPA has limited options here, they are too small to internalise and rival bidders have been scared away by DXS blocking stake.
Good call coolcup.
When bid for takeover, do the REITs often not get offered much of a premium to the current SP? If someone could explain the fundamentals pls that would be good.
I suspect it would depend on how close the targets' share price is to the nta of their assets. If the target reit is already trading at a premium to nta, then there is little room to move for the company launching the take-over to get a bargain. If the targets' share price is trading at a discount to nta then the take over company can offer a premium to the share price but still be less than the nta.
Thanks Nulla Nulla. What do you think of IOF? Do you think it could be the next target? They have recently sold their DOF investment which was the poison pill in the structure. I wonder if GPT may be interested given they were beaten to the punch by DXS on CPA??
Thanks. Do REITs normally trade at a SP close to nta?
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