Thanks Pouipoui
On the matter of the 73% privately controlled CIMIC and its tactics :
It’s latest 10% buy back (the third?) was approved last month http://www.medianet.com.au/releases/182669/
Here’s last May’s story on its
“CIMIC market value drops by $1.6b on alleged 'accounting shenanigans'
JENNY WIGGINS
May 7, 2019 — 11.12am
CIMIC has lost $1.6 billion of value in just two days after Hong Kong's GMT Research claimed Australia's biggest construction group had used "accounting shenanigans" to inflate pre-tax profits by $1 billion over the past two years.
CIMIC, which is building many of Australia's biggest infrastructure projects including Sydney's $16.8 billion WestConnex motorway, Brisbane's new $5.4 billion Cross River Rail and the Melbourne Metro, has been "dressing up" its financial statements since it was acquired by Spanish construction group ACS in 2014, according to new research by GMT.
The company's stock, which lost $1.50, or 3.2 per cent, on Tuesday to close at $45 following a 7 per cent drop on Monday, was likely to be de-rated once investors realise the extent to which it has been overstating its profits and cash flow, GMT said. The company's market capitalisation slid to $14.6 billion on Tuesday from $16.2 billion on Friday.
The research group, which argues the stock is worth just $23 per share, said in a report that CIMIC's accounting shared many of the features of Carillon, the British construction group that collapsed in January last year.
Although CIMIC typically operates on fixed-price contracts, it can be liable for unexpected costs – such as financial claims by home owners claiming damage from tunnelling for WestConnex.
and The Australian’s update from yesterday
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/bu...t/news-story/ceb5c36cdc95a53b1ea526ac9e40f1d6
$1.8bn writedown as CIMIC exits Middle East
Australia’s biggest construction company, CIMIC, will take a $1.8bn writedown and scrap its final dividend after axing its troubled Middle East business, blaming tough market conditions in the region.
- PERRY WILLIAMS
SENIOR BUSINESS WRITER
- 12:00AM JANUARY 24, 202o
CIMIC, formerly known as Leighton Holdings, will offload its non-controlling 45 per cent stake in the Dubai-based BIC Contracting joint venture, previously badged as Al Habtoor Leighton, with a shortlist of bidders drawn up.
The giant writedown includes a cash outlay of $700m to cover debts the Gulf joint venture still owes to lenders, with a final dividend for 2019 axed.
CIMIC shares plummeted 19.9 per cent to $28.03, marking their lowest level in over three years.
“Wow, I’ve always thought there would be skeletons in the CIMIC closet,” Forager Funds Management chief investment officer Steve Johnson tweeted. “Today’s $1.8bn skeleton is more like a mass grave in the backyard.”
The Sydney-based engineering group — which is building major infrastructure projects in Australia including Melbourne’s troubled West Gate Tunnel — said it had started talks with lenders, creditors, clients and stakeholders following “an accelerated deterioration of local market conditions” in the Middle East.
“After thorough evaluation of all available options, CIMIC has decided to exit the region and focus its resources and capital allocation on growth opportunities in its main core markets and geographies: Australia, New Zealand and Asia Pacific,” the company said in a statement.
The move was flagged by The Australian’s DataRoom in December.
CIMIC first gained exposure to the Middle East in 2007 when Leighton merged its regional operations with Al-Habtoor Engineering group, taking a 45 per cent stake in the combined company for $870m in a bid to win new business in the booming Gulf construction market.
Leighton at the time moved its international headquarters to Dubai from Kuala Lumpur to cash in on the region’s thriving building sector, which initially appeared to have dodged any major fallout from the global financial crisis.
Still, market conditions eventually started to unravel and the group has for years struggled to collect hundreds of millions of dollars of bad debts in the region, with court proceedings often drawn out and lacking regulatory enforcement.
Al Habtoor was established in Dubai in 1970 and made a name for itself in the Gulf’s burgeoning market after building the city’s distinctive sail-shaped Burj Al Arab hotel.
However, the joint venture has soured in recent years, with the Al Habtoor group distancing itself from the subsidiary amid a broader downturn in the region’s construction markets.
CIMIC is controlled by the Spanish-German shareholder Hochtief-ACS, which owns a 73 per cent stake in the business. The Hong Kong-based GMT Research — which sparked a $1.5bn fall in CIMIC’s stock last May after questioning CIMIC’s financial account “engineering” — said it became increasingly concerned over the company’s substantial factoring of receivables and a spike in debt guarantees for its Middle East joint venture.
CIMIC had stopped recognising losses at BIC Contracting, according to GMT, clouding the ability of investors to assess the unit’s financial performance while the company’s debt guarantees for the division continued to spiral.
The research alleged CIMIC had boosted pre-tax profits by up to $800m by pre-booking contract revenue, and flagged a potential $700m reversal in previously booked revenue in response to newly introduced Australian accounting guidelines. CIMIC said at the time it complied with its disclosure obligations and its results were fully audited. “Following CIMIC’s interim results in July, we highlighted the rapid increase in guarantees for BICC’s debt,” GMT analyst Nigel Stevenson told The Australian on Thursday. “The spiralling of BICC’s debts which CIMIC had guaranteed was a key warning sign that BICC’s performance was rapidly deteriorating.”
One company insider said CIMIC’s attempt to sell its subsidiary Thiess may have partly been driven by cashflow concerns sparked by its Middle East woes.
“There has been a feeling in the market they were trying to dredge up an offset with a Thiess deal and that’s because they knew there was a big hit coming,” the source said.
CIMIC expects 2019 net profit of around $800m.
hrmmmm ?
Unfortunately it flags it intends to be making things even more difficult here in Australia
.. “After thorough evaluation of all available options, CIMIC has decided to exit the region and focus its resources and capital allocation on growth opportunities in its main core markets and geographies: Australia, New Zealand and Asia Pacific,” the company said in a statement.”
Perhaps - if CIMIC is really hurting - it will be more realistic in its tendering estimates and the ‘market’ here will be healthier for all.
Meanwhile, as you say NRW knows its strengths and is smart as paint, and Athena too, and it has so far managed to give us some very excellent margins and I don’t think it intends to stop doing that.
Cheers
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