Let’s review dargie’s post on 28-10-08 (so lets do a share buyback )
“This is how a voluntary share buyback could work for PPP.
PPP has 588M shares on issue.
Let us say they launch a formal voluntary share buyback at (say) 25 cents a share, on a 1:3 basis. This means for every 3 shares you own, the company will give you 25 cents for 1 of them and you keep the other two.
As this is a VOLUNTARY share buyback you do not need to participate if you do not want to. However (just like a rights issue) you can also oversubscribe to a voluntary issue as well, so someone could put 100% of their shares forward for the buyback and mop up the entitlements of those (ie me) who choose not to participate at all.
Out of the 588M shares on issue, I suspect the 188M or so shares held by major shareholders will opt out and I also doubt they would get a full participation in any case, but there will be a core of shareholders (including a lot of arbitrageurs and day traders who will go for 100%) will may take the opportunity to sell out 100% of their holdings.
So, for arguments sake, let's say 130M out of the possible 196M available for buyback participate (including the oversubscriptions). That would cost 130M x 25 cents = $33M.
Once completed, the new company looks like this.
588M - 130M shares cancelled = 455M shares
Cash on hand of 149M - 33M buyback + reserves value of $130M = new net assets of $246M.
New NTA = $246M/455M shares = 54.1 cps.
The remaining 455M sharehoders just increased their NTA per share from 47.4 to 54.1 cps. That is a gain of $30M for an investment of $33M and they never even left the office. That is almost 100% return on OUR money.”
Cheers
PPP Price at posting:
20.0¢ Sentiment: None Disclosure: Not Held