Note the date of this story -- then note the date on Michael West's story. Having been a regular reader of West's articles IMHO he is a shoot from the hip kind of guy. Which is all the more dangerous as he is not a journo reporting on the latest liposuction technology, or the latest bridge being built, but on matters which can influence big money and lives.
http://news.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=385394
ABC Learning: no share trigger on notes to convert to equity
Thursday Feb 28 13:00 AEDT
ABC Learning Centres said Thursday its $600 million in convertible notes weren't at risk of being triggered into equity.
"The trigger to convert to equity is not associated with changes to the company's share price or market capitalisation," an ABCspokeswoman told Dow Jones Newswires.
She said trigger events are related to a full takeover of the company or sale of a core business, which is defined as a division with more than 50% of the company's earnings.
This implies ABC's Australian operations - which make up more than 50% of earnings - are not up for sale, leaving its UK and US businesses as possible targets.
An industry participant said earlier Thursday that private equity is behind an approach for parts of the childcare operator's business.
A report in The Australian Thursday had said hedge funds were buying the convertible notes to trigger an early conversion and gain control of the company.
Without citing sources, the paper said that if ABC Learning's market capitalization falls to $500 million and the notes are converted, the former note holders will own more than half of the company.
At one point during Tuesday's share price plunge, ABC's market capitalization fell to $550 million.
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http://business.smh.com.au/bad-notes-trigger-abcs-renewed-dive/20080307-1xrm.html
Bad notes trigger ABC's renewed dive
Email Print Normal font Large font If Goldman is correct, this security is one of the silliest ever issued to raise money. It would even go down in the annals of corporate history as the "iconic" security of the great market downturn of 2008.Related Coverage
Eddy Groves' ABC stake all but erased
AdvertisementMichael West
March 7, 2008 - 7:02PM
Eddy Groves was looking good. He had nipped over to the US on a mission to sell some assets and recapitalise his child-care empire.
In no time at all, he had struck a deal with Morgan Stanley Private Equity. It might have been a fire sale but the $502 million price tag for the bulk of his US centres didn't look too shabby.
Eddy was back. Smaller. But back.
With the $811 million proceeds from a convertible notes issue, ABC could now make a large dent in the $1.2 billion senior bank facilities - the covenants of which ABC had come so perilously close to breaching.
The stock price rallied. Then mysteriously, at 3pm yesterday, ABC shares took a 25% pounding. The slide has continued today, with the stock down a further 20% at one point.
What happened?
One theory is the hedge funds are back having their evil way with Eddy's stock price again. It could be true. Perhaps they have seen the terms of the recent convertible note issue.
It is a bit speculative at this point but, according to a Goldman Sachs JBWere note to clients, these convertible notes may be known as "exploding convertible notes", that is, "if the ordinary shares drop in value, the number on issue explodes".
If so, ABC shareholders are in for a torrid time and whoever owns these convertible notes has got the company by the proverbials.
"The last big company to issue such notes was HIH Insurance in 1999. In the case of ABC, there appears to be no limit on how many shares could be issued on conversion, whereas with HIH there was."
If Goldman is correct, this security is one of the silliest ever issued to raise money. It would even go down in the annals of corporate history as the "iconic" security of the great market downturn of 2008.
ABC issued the notes last June, according to reports, about the time of the US credit market meltdown.
"It did the issue on a dollar basis rather than the conventional `fixed proportion' system," says Goldman, which means they are an absolute bargain. Why would you ever buy ordinary shares again?
The story goes that the hedge funds may have driven down the ABC ordinary shares while buying up as many of these notes as they could.
Naturally Eddy Groves and his advisers from Austock did not contemplate the stock being so low but that is no excuse for issuing these notes, if indeed the story is right.
According to reports, Comm-Sec holds some $360 million of the $600 million tranche and may turn out to be a very large holder of ABC.
In Eddy's defence, unlike the Allco executives, Eddy declined to draw a large salary last year, preferring to take stock instead.
He is indeed a true believer, though perhaps poorly advised.
Despite the aggressive accounting, extreme expansion tendencies and poor corporate governance of ABC that has led to its recent troubles, Eddy Groves certainly deserves to own a few of those convertible notes.
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