michael_selway
Coal & Phosphate, thats it!
- Joined
- 20 October 2005
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I suggest that this decade will go down in history as the period of the takeover. It may be private equity of other, it doesn't matter I think there will be plenty more.
So my research is directed into likely targets. Can anyone suggest targets?
Obvious suggestions are the media stocks, clearly CGJ are going and Forsters appear ripe.
Others??
I felt the insurance industry was due (see post back on 30 July) and since we've seen Suncorp, Promina, OAMPs and a few others merge/TO. I felt the same with Wesfarmers (OAMPs, Coles, Alinta?). And I'm inclined to agree here as well.There is some suggestion that oil Co.s may be the next wave
I felt the insurance industry was due (see post back on 30 July) and since we've seen Suncorp, Promina, OAMPs and a few others merge/TO. I felt the same with Wesfarmers (OAMPs, Coles, Alinta?). And I'm inclined to agree here as well.
And I think it's true at both ends of the market. The Australian market seems to have priced the explorers (big and small) quite cheaply. Woodside looks reasonably cheap when priced on its 2p reserves.
The same could be said for a lot of little companies. The issue with these is that they're not big enough to attract much international interest but still have some great income streams and potential laden assets, so TOs from JV partners or mergers between Australian juniors is possible. PSA, ROC, TAP, HZN, NWE, AZZ & AED amongst many others all meet this criteria. The likes of PCL and FAR are also quite interesting as they hold large stakes in acerage that is significant both in size and potential (1bbo+) - an aggressive player like Tullow PLC could come into the picture here sooner or later.
New tax break may trigger a takeover tsunami
Malcolm Maiden
December 18, 2006
IT IS likely to be a short Christmas break for the sharemarket and the private equity raiders who are pulling share prices up by their own bootlaces. Although the Federal Government apparently does not believe it, a change in the way overseas investors are assessed for capital gains tax sets the stage for an increase in the already astonishing volume of private equity-backed takeover bids in this country.
The changes, passed by the Senate on December 6, a year-and-a-half after they were announced, exempt overseas investors from paying tax on gains in the value of shares, including major stakes in listed companies. In effect, foreign investors are now excused from paying capital gains tax on investments that do not involve the acquisition of property, including resources.
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