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SATS
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Sats
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Slowturtle
Senior |
03-Oct-2022 11:04
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The fiasco of the selldown lies with the executive management and, in this case, the buck stops at the CEO. He should do better. | ||||
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ckmpd1
Supreme |
03-Oct-2022 11:02
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agree.    very uncertain for the next few yrs.  otherwise why shares dropped from $4.10 ten days ago to $2.97 today? heavy selling too.. many better counters to choose from
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FATABA
Supreme |
03-Oct-2022 10:55
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in any deal ...it is MOST important to have clarity ...and esp on the funding ....how are you going to pay for it ?  More so in such a climate where rate are rocketing up , global situation and travel are not settle in .  Again , this deal was closed w insufficient clarity on the financing ?  Poor management of the situation unfortunately .  No point talking on how good it is long term ....how long ? when integration of a bigger elephant has not even done .  trade w caution / right price of 2.79 fyi ( if that is it )  DYODD 
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Boatman
Master |
03-Oct-2022 10:44
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yes did not rebounce well! testing last week low | ||||
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Slowturtle
Senior |
03-Oct-2022 10:29
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Cat has nine lives. This morning' s dead bounce has more to come. | ||||
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Adrianinsing
Elite |
03-Oct-2022 10:09
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Ok this morning so far it looks like SATS had a dead cat bounce - thought would extend to $3.30 but only to $3.09 - very disappointed that the dead cat didn?t bounce higher | ||||
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Joelton
Supreme |
03-Oct-2022 08:40
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Sats-WFS deal: Lack of clarity on funding plan diverts investor focus from merits of acquisition
Some Sats shareholders may wonder if the deal is in their best interests after watching the stock dive this past week
THE board of Sats could not have been unaware that its proposed acquisition of Worldwide Flight Services (WFS) would be met with hostility in the market.
 
On Sep 21, the inflight caterer and ground handler confirmed a news report that it was indeed discussing a potential acquisition of WFS. The following day &ndash despite some analysts extolling the strategic benefits of such a deal &ndash its shares fell more than 5 per cent.
 
As it happened, Sep 21 was also the day the United States Federal Open Market Committee hiked interest rates by 75 basis points for a third consecutive time and slashed its estimates of US growth for 2022 and 2023 &ndash which sparked a big sell-off around the globe.
 
So, when Sats announced this past week that it will acquire WFS at a total cost of 1.3 billion euros (or approximately S$1.8 billion), its board and paid advisers should not have been surprised by the market&rsquo s seeming lack of appetite for the deal. 
 
Sats closed Friday (Sep 30) at S$3.01 &ndash down more than 22 per cent since the acquisition was announced on Sep 28 and down more than 26 per cent since the company confirmed media reports about the deal.
 
Given the skittishness in the market, it seems strange to me that Sats did not state upfront how it will finance the acquisition of WFS.
 
Instead, Sats said last week that it has secured an &ldquo acquisition bridge facility&rdquo , but is still evaluating its options on a final funding structure.
 
The company added that its &ldquo base funding plan&rdquo involves raising equity capital from its shareholders and new strategic investors. This might include a placement of new shares, hybrid securities or convertible instruments.
 
Yet, the pro forma financial effects of the acquisition provided by Sats last week are based on the assumption that the company raises S$1.7 billion through a renounceable rights issue of 609 million new shares at S$2.79 each. 
 
This hint that a big, deeply-discounted rights issue is in the offing has very likely added to the downward pressure on the stock, and made it less likely that Sats will now be able to tap strategic investors for equity capital on attractive terms. 
 
Thanks to the lack of clarity on how Sats will fund the acquisition of WFS in a tough market, investors are not focusing on the value the world&rsquo s biggest air cargo handler will add to Sats but on how much further Sats&rsquo share price might fall. 
 
Immediate EPS accretion?
 
Some Sats shareholders may now be wondering if the acquisition of WFS is really in their best interests, and are second-guessing the stated merits of the deal.
 
In particular, the claim by Sats and its paid advisers that the acquisition of WFS and the deeply-discounted rights issue will immediately result in significant earnings per share (EPS) accretion is being closely scrutinised by some investors. 
 
On a pro forma basis, Sats&rsquo EPS for its financial year (FY) to Mar 31, 2022 would have been 3.2 cents including amortisation of intangible assets or 5.4 cents excluding amortisation of intangible assets.
 
Sats&rsquo actual reported EPS for FY2022 was 1.8 cents. 
 
On the face of it, Sats is suggesting the acquisition of WFS will immediately boost its EPS by some 78 per cent after amortisation, and 200 per cent before amortisation.
 
But some market watchers figure the pandemic might have boosted the air cargo handling business at WFS during the 12 months to Mar 31 even as it weighed on Sats&rsquo overall performance &ndash thus amplifying the pro forma improvement in EPS.
 
For its FY2022 to Mar 31, Sats reported revenue of S$1.18 billion and earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (Ebitda) of S$94.2 million. This was still well below its FY2020 revenue of S$1.94 billion and Ebitda of S$355.6 million.
 
By contrast, WFS achieved revenue of 1.72 billion euros and Ebitda of 232 million euros for the 12 months to Mar 31, 2022. This was significantly above the revenue of 1.43 billion euros and Ebitda of 75 million euros it earned in 2019, before the pandemic started.
 
As the pandemic wanes and profitability at Sats and WFS normalise, the actual EPS uplift from the deal &ndash which is expected to be completed by the end of March 2023 &ndash might turn out to be much lower.
 
In any case, the acquisition and rights issue will leave Sats with significantly higher gearing. On a pro forma basis, its debt-to-equity ratio as at Mar 31, 2022 would have risen to 71 per cent from 46 per cent. 
 
Its net debt-to-Ebitda ratio would have been 3.4 times instead of 0.5 times.
 
Conceptually compelling
 
Still, the acquisition of WFS seems conceptually compelling for Sats. 
 
The company said last week that the &ldquo transformational opportunity&rdquo will give it a network of more than 200 cargo and ground handling stations in over 20 countries. 
 
The combined group&rsquo s network will cover trade routes responsible for more than half of global air cargo volumes. 
 
Sats will also be better positioned to benefit from the growth of e-commerce as well as increasing demand for specialised cargo handling for pharmaceuticals and perishable products. 
 
Sats said it expects the increased scale and geographical diversification of its air cargo business to make its earnings more resilient. 
 
It also sees opportunities to harness synergies that could add S$100 million to the combined group&rsquo s Ebitda over the medium term.
 
More to the point, it seems unlikely that the slump in Sats&rsquo share price will derail its acquisition of WFS. Temasek owns 39.7 per cent of Sats and has provided an irrevocable undertaking to vote in favour of the deal when an extraordinary general meeting is convened. 
 
Until the deeply discounted rights issue everyone seems to be expecting is done and dusted, however, it seems unlikely to me that shares in Sats will recover much.
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Adrianinsing
Elite |
02-Oct-2022 19:08
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It definitely is NOT
32,000,000 were transacted post market There is no 32,000,000 married deal
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TANPK123
Elite |
02-Oct-2022 18:43
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It's Under Married deal price of $3.010.
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Adrianinsing
Elite |
02-Oct-2022 16:27
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Hilarious - yup go ahead - follow your own advice 👍 👍
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Adrianinsing
Elite |
02-Oct-2022 13:46
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This merger is being handled by an exceptionally professional team called Latham & Watkins who have advised SATS Ltd. on its proposed acquisition of Worldwide Flight Services.
The Latham team is led by Singapore partner Sharon Lau, with partner Michael Sturrock, associates Penelope Davey, Tommy Tan, Jonathan Wah, and Hong Kong associate Rita Hong, with assistance from Singapore associates Carolyn Wong and Cherine Teh. Advice was also provided on finance matters by Singapore partner Timothy Hia, with associates Chuan Wei Kong and Marc Tan on commercial contracts, intellectual property, and data privacy matters by Singapore associates Esther Franks, Gen Huong Tan, and Zoe Wang, and Tokyo associate Benjamin Han on US regulatory matters by Washington, D.C. partner Damara Chambers and San Francisco partner Joshua Holian, with Washington, D.C. counsel Andrew Galdes and Ruchi Gill, and associates Matthew Gregory, Allen Perry, Blake Page and Asia Cadet on European antitrust and regulatory matters by Brussels partner Luca Crocco and Frankfurt partner Max Hauser, with Hamburg counsel Jana Dammann de Chapto, Brussels associate Jérôme de Ponsay, and Frankfurt associates Anne Haas and Nicolas Jung on European regulatory matters by London partner Rob Moulton on employment matters by London partner Sarah Gadd, with London associates Paul Lawrence and Olivia Sadler, and Paris associates Romain Nairi and Cosma Scutiero on US corporate law matters by New York partner Jane Greyf, with associate McKenzie Southworth, and Los Angeles associate Brent Webber on French corporate law matters by Paris partner Charles-Antoine Guelluy, with associate Juliette Macé on Spanish corporate law matters by Madrid counsel Luis Lozano, with associates Alejandro Albiñana Arroyo, José Luis Bootello and Jesús Miralles de Imperial on German corporate law matters by Düsseldorf associates Juan Garcia and Alexander Pfeifer on real estate matters by London partner Quentin Gwyer, with London counsel Michael Beanland, Chicago counsel Jeffery Anderson, and Chicago associate Matthew Mrazek on environmental matters by London partner Paul Davies and Orange County partner Christopher Norton, with London counsel Michael Green, and associate James Bee on tax matters by London partner Karl Mah, with associates Lina Le Roux and Mini Kyprianou and on W&I insurance matters by Singapore counsel Michael Rackham. |
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Adrianinsing
Elite |
02-Oct-2022 13:42
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No - good suggestion though
I will be to the point - married deals under SGX regulations must be marked M whether it is it in pre or post market settlement or in normal trading hours - no M was Indicated.
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TANPK123
Elite |
02-Oct-2022 11:07
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The last 5min was done married deal by private settlement by broker. A Company Sell to B Company at specific price of $3.010.
A company need money. B Company agreed to buy from A company.
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Adrianinsing
Elite |
02-Oct-2022 10:52
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Post market on Friday - recovery 2.95 to $3.01 was on approximately 32,000,000 share settled on a 5 minute period not 8,000,000 as I had inadvertently mentioned earlier.
32,000,000 done at a higher price in a 5 minute settlement period is no dead cat bounce - dead cat bounces suck in buyers over a more sustained period and not in a 5 minute settlement. The 32,000,000 shares post market is also highly unlikely to be mainly short covering either - the vast majority of short covering does not take place in a post market environment as the risk to cover within a 5 minute matching period is far too high - more likely to be consolidating before above higher. Given the fact that SATS was doing 4.01/4.02 last Monday morning and dropped on cumulatively around 100 million shares to close $3.01 largely on a fear of having a rights issue it would seem that the selling is way over-done - and would seem poised to recover around 30c +++ of that $1 loss based upon true short covering and maybe a real dead cat sometime soon. |
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Adrianinsing
Elite |
01-Oct-2022 13:40
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Well done eagleeyes1989 - yours is the best and most articulate comment today
What is behind the assumption that ex rights means the share price should drop Ex-rights refers to a share of stock that is selling without any associated rights to buy additional shares being offered by the issuer. Because these rights have value, the ex-rights shares sell for a lower price than would shares that have the rights associated with them. The shares may be designated as ex-rights because the rights have expired, they have been exercised, or they have been transferred to another investor. Why for many companies like SATS the ex rights means that the share price does not necessarily have to drop and after ex rights why it may even go HIGHER 1. SATS price could easily RISE after ex rights as an incentive for holders to pick up and convert the rights 2. The price behaviour post market Friday as well as throughout the last week suggests that a large investor ( not just Temasek ) is buying millions and this suggests that they have reason to think that SATS share price will rally ex rights 3. By exercising in full all the rights entitlements offered for SATS under the rights issue, the shareholder can maintain his proportionate ownership in the company with the enlarged share capital without experiencing shareholding dilution. 4. Any temporary drop in SATS after ex rights and the commensurate fall in market share price is offset by the gain made when SATS shareholders subscribed to the new shares. 5. To argue that the SATS price must drop does NOT mean that shareholders MUST take a loss because they have 4 clear options There are 4 options for shareholders: A) Take up the rights- there will be a specific date by which you must exercise your rights and pay for the new shares. There is usually no charge for taking up your rights. B) Sell the nil-paid rights- you can do this once they have been, provisionally allotted, to you and you can see them on your account. This will incur the usual dealing charge. 3) Let the rights lapse- if they have any value at this point the parties acting on behalf of the company may sell them on your behalf and return the proceeds less any costs to you. 4) Tail swallowing- this involves selling enough rights to cover the cost of taking up the remainder. It is more common in the event of a heavy rights issue
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Adrianinsing
Elite |
01-Oct-2022 13:33
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Another ridiculous assumption - I honestly think that forum contributors should not comment unless it is has at least a small amount of thought behind the rationale
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Adrianinsing
Elite |
01-Oct-2022 13:30
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Yes this comparison shows that some investors in this forum have such little knowledge that they are their own liability and should never buy shares - I suggest that you stick to bonds or put your money into the bank instead
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Adrianinsing
Elite |
01-Oct-2022 13:28
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You are correct - well thought through
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stockclinic
Member |
01-Oct-2022 13:26
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Most of them are selling short, SATS Coming a few months will making a profit. in fact, the last few quarters report SATS at least  1 quarter make profit    SATS  only company doing flight business there is no competition. so just do it don' t think
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TikTalk
Supreme |
01-Oct-2022 13:25
Yells: "Anyone miss me?" |
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Sats Can go below 2.79 due to a deep recession same as many stocks that could also. This WFS is good for long term investor, speculators should not be involved too much atm.
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