- Joined
- 25 July 2010
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- 284
Emotional attachment - you gota be kidding me.
I tend to like stocks that have been very good to me, like the 7 or so stocks i have that have given me 200% - 300%+ gains, VED is far from that, potential (blue sky) VED has lots of...blue sky is a wonderful thing, every 300%+ winner needs it.
Emotional attachment - you gota be kidding me.
Sorry, couldn't just let this go..blue sky is impossible to measure and there is a speculative aspect to it but it is a very real thing, potential is what it is...have a look at XRO and ACX that price action is pretty much all blue sky.
From there my interest was to follow through on my decision and try to understand if I got it wrong - and in one sense the takeover offer implies i did get it wrong - i struggled to see value at $2, a large foreign company that knows much more about the business and its realisable potential than me, has valued it at $2.825.
Excuse my ignorance as I still very much a beginner.There isn't many quality business on the ASX to put your money into, where you just ignore most of the day to day noise and dividend comes every year.
There are a few companies on my watchlist but I think Veda is better. Are my thoughts wrong?
Excuse my ignorance as I still very much a beginner.
This a new experience for me. I wanted to buy for the long term. Should I treat this like a forced sale? I brought in around $1.91 and now I am forced to sell the shares to Equifax for $2.825. They can at least pay the brokerage.
So in a few weeks or months, there will be money coming back to me? Money that I rather have in Veda. How am I going to find another quality company? I know nothing about Equifax and it is not like we are going to buy Equifax overseas? Maybe someone will?
I thought good investing is deciding to sell when things suit the investor - regardless of price fluctuations due to buying with a good safety of margin. Not via a forced takeover. If I was smart enough to find another company like Veda, I probably wouldn't whinge but now I have no idea of what to do. There are a few companies on my watchlist but I think Veda is better. Are my thoughts wrong?
I'm sure there are plenty of better businesses on the ASX out there than Veda. Its margins point to a somewhat passable business, its returns on capital and equity is nothing to write home about. With last year's earnings of 78M, some idiot is offering something like $2.5 billion for and we're serious about it being underpriced?
.
We were talking about 'blue sky' earlier, clearly Equifax can see some otherwise they wouldn't be prepared to pay so much for such a 'passable' business...blue sky is an intangible that not everyone can see.
You're assuming that all M&A activity is beneficial to the acquirer - that's far from reality.
Pretty sure 'do something syndrome' plays a role here.
If I was a holder... I wouldn't be too upset. The price isn't exactly lowball on a number of measures. You are swapping the certainty of cash today against the uncertainty of future growth. And you get a chance to redeploy more cash than you had previously... so even if you were to earn a slightly lower return on the alternate investment you can still potentially come out ahead.
Current EBIT is about $120m.I agree. I see a lot of talk about blue sky, and it being a great business, but no one seems to have quantified what this business is worth to justify rejecting the offer. $2.4b for $80m fcf seems like a pretty decent premium, imo. How many saying the offer isn't high enough would be buying at $2.825?
You're assuming that all M&A activity is beneficial to the acquirer - that's far from reality.
Pretty sure 'do something syndrome' plays a role here.
We were talking about 'blue sky' earlier, clearly Equifax can see some otherwise they wouldn't be prepared to pay so much for such a 'passable' business...blue sky is an intangible that not everyone can see.
Excuse my ignorance as I still very much a beginner.
This a new experience for me. I wanted to buy for the long term. Should I treat this like a forced sale? I brought in around $1.91 and now I am forced to sell the shares to Equifax for $2.825. They can at least pay the brokerage.
So in a few weeks or months, there will be money coming back to me? Money that I rather have in Veda. How am I going to find another quality company? I know nothing about Equifax and it is not like we are going to buy Equifax overseas? Maybe someone will?
I thought good investing is deciding to sell when things suit the investor - regardless of price fluctuations due to buying with a good safety of margin. Not via a forced takeover. If I was smart enough to find another company like Veda, I probably wouldn't whinge but now I have no idea of what to do. There are a few companies on my watchlist but I think Veda is better. Are my thoughts wrong?
hope PPT kick some up some noise and maybe get to $2.90
"It's a fair price. The Veda board is doing the right thing by shareholders to recommend it," Perpetual head of equities Paul Skamvougeras said.
Perpetual is Veda's second-largest shareholder with 10.7 per cent.
That being said, the bull argument isn't without merit.Yes it does. 15% is a pretty decent hurdle though for most.But like you say if you play around with the numbers it's hard to believe they could deploy all that much more capital at those historical ROIC and would probably need to get some growth by acquisition, once you add back indefinite life intangibles the growth profile/capital required equation changes quite a bit. I admit I haven't really done much more than rolled a few numbers around in my head and scratched a few things on a pad, but $2.825 looks very fair to me. A good company, but always seemed a bit dear for me.
If incremental ROIC is double historical ROIC, then the future investments required are only about 4-5 years current growth capex spend ($40-50m per annum). Doesn't look all that expensive if you look at it that way.
That all being said, I don't know enough about this industry to tell you what incremental ROIC is achievable, so I'd basically be pissing into the wind trying to come up with a reliable valuation.
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