takeovers

TERANET INCOME FUND $9.50, Toronto symbol TF.UN, has received a new takeover offer from the Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System (OMERS). The new offer of $10.25 a unit is 6.8% less than the previous offer of $11.00. Teranet’s units are now trading for roughly 7% below the new offer. The lower offer reflects a slowing economy in Ontario and falling real estate values. That could hurt demand for Teranet’s electronic land registry services. As well, it’s increasingly difficult to secure loans for corporate takeovers. Teranet recommended that investors accept the first OMERS offer, after it failed to attract other bidders. Teranet has not yet commented on the new offer of $10.25 a unit. However, it’s still unlikely that a new bidder will emerge. As well, Teranet’s second-largest shareholder has accepted the new offer....
The Dow’s 11.1% gain on Monday was the fifth-biggest percentage gain on record. The 9.8% gain on Toronto the next day was the biggest ever. Markets remain volatile and have moved down since, but my view is that governments around the world are now taking the kind of steps that will contain the crisis and eventually restore liquidity in the banking system. You can only spot market reversals in hindsight, so it’s too early to declare if we are near a bottom. But even if we are, markets are apt to remain volatile and some stocks are bound to go to lower lows....
This downturn is going a lot further down that I ever expected. I still see it as a financial panic, rather than an indicator of the depth of the recession that now seems to have started. In other words, the market drop reflects a drying up in lending activity and fear of a depression, rather than a drying up in business activity. In the depths of a market downturn, some observers always predict that we are on the verge of another 1930s depression. In the 1930s, however, the U.S. and other governments did all the wrong things. They raised taxes, raised tariffs and did nothing to halt bank failures. The U.S. and other governments are doing all the right things to revive lending and credit, in my view. They are injecting funds into the financial system, arranging takeovers of failing financial companies, and moving to protect depositors. Eventually these efforts will pay off. Lending will then swiftly revive, and the market will go through a sharp recovery. There is no way to tell when that will happen, but you can bet that it will spur widespread disbelief, and warnings that it is just a temporary reprieve and that the downturn will soon resume....
This downturn is going a lot further down that I ever expected. I still see it as a financial panic, rather than an indicator of the depth of the recession that now seems to have started. In other words, the market drop reflects a drying up in lending activity and fear of a depression, rather than a drying up in business activity. In the depths of a market downturn, some observers always predict that we are on the verge of another 1930s depression. In the 1930s, however, the U.S. and other governments did all the wrong things. They raised taxes, raised tariffs and did nothing to halt bank failures. The U.S. and other governments are doing all the right things to revive lending and credit, in my view. They are injecting funds into the financial system, arranging takeovers of failing financial companies, and moving to protect depositors. Eventually these efforts will pay off. Lending will then swiftly revive, and the market will go through a sharp recovery. There is no way to tell when that will happen, but you can bet that it will spur widespread disbelief, and warnings that it is just a temporary reprieve and that the downturn will soon resume....
This downturn is going a lot further down that I ever expected. I still see it as a financial panic, rather than an indicator of the depth of the recession that now seems to have started. In other words, the market drop reflects a drying up in lending activity and fear of a depression, rather than a drying up in business activity. In the depths of a market downturn, some observers always predict that we are on the verge of another 1930s depression. In the 1930s, however, the U.S. and other governments did all the wrong things. They raised taxes, raised tariffs and did nothing to halt bank failures. The U.S. and other governments are doing all the right things to revive lending and credit, in my view. They are injecting funds into the financial system, arranging takeovers of failing financial companies, and moving to protect depositors. Eventually these efforts will pay off. Lending will then swiftly revive, and the market will go through a sharp recovery. There is no way to tell when that will happen, but you can bet that it will spur widespread disbelief, and warnings that it is just a temporary reprieve and that the downturn will soon resume....
At one time, mutual funds within a particular ‘fund family’ often shared some key investment characteristic, such as a conservative or aggressive investment approach, or a stress on value as opposed to growth. However, due to corporate mergers and takeovers in the mutual-funds industry, and more aggressive marketing, a fund’s membership in a fund family now has little bearing on its investment approach or appeal as an investment. Below, for instance, we analyse five funds from the Ivy Group. (Note that Ivy is now part of Mackenzie Financial, which in turn is part of IGM Financial. The contact information listed for Ivy Growth and Income also applies to the other four.)...
Despite a stream of nerve-rattling financial news, starting with the failure of the first U.S. bailout package, the Dow Industrials and the S&P 500 managed to hold above Monday’s lows this week until just before Friday’s close. It’s a mistake to read too much into this, of course. But it is encouraging to see these two indexes move sideways in this depressing news environment. The plunge to new lows by the Canadian market reflects the heavy resources content in our economy and stock market. The Resources sector stands to suffer in an economic setback, and that’s already begun to happen with the drop in oil, copper and other metals. In addition to the decline in our market, our dollar lost nearly four cents this past week, relative to the U.S. dollar. We continue to recommend that you spread your investments our across the five main economic sectors, and devote around a quarter of your portfolio to U.S. stocks. Market turnarounds often occur in times of high volatility and bad news. Our advice is to resist any urge you may feel to sell good-quality stocks, just because you fear they may go lower....
BROADRIDGE FINANCIAL SOLUTIONS $15.79 (New York symbol BR: SI Rating: Extra risk) (201-714-3000; www.broadridge.com; Shares outstanding: 140.5 million; Market cap: $2.2 billion) specializes in three areas of service to the investment industry: investor communications; securities processing; and transaction clearing, trade settlements and other back office operations. Clients include 250 banks, 500 mutual fund families and 5,000 publicly listed companies. Broadridge has moved down lately along with most financial services stocks. However, while tight credit conditions may lead to fewer takeovers and related investor communications activity, the company’s overall business continues to grow. Broadridge distributes over one billion investor communications each year, including investor account statements, trade confirmations and tax statements. Components of its securities processing services are used by seven of the top 10 U.S. broker-dealers. Broadridge mails and processes over 70% of all proxy votes. Its fixed income business processes trades with a settlement value of $2 trillion a day....
Today’s rebound in the market is reassuring, but I expect stocks to remain highly volatile for a month or more. After that, we could see a six-month rebound in prices. The U.S. bailout of major financial institutions raises inflation risk over the next few years, but it heads off panic. Nobody can predict market bottoms, but I suspect we are much closer to the bottom than the top. NORTEL NETWORKS CORP. $3.25, Toronto symbol NT, fell 50% this week after the company cut its revenue and earnings outlook for 2008. Due to slowing demand for telecommunications equipment, unfavourable foreign exchange rates and delays delivering certain products, Nortel now expects revenue for 2008 will be 2% to 4% lower than in 2007. It had earlier predicted that revenue would rise this year. Due to the lower revenues, Nortel will probably lose $0.39 U.S. a share in 2008. That estimate excludes the costs of a new restructuring plan. Nortel earned $0.37 U.S. a share before unusual items in 2007....
FORDING CANADIAN COAL TRUST $92.55 (Toronto symbol FDG.UN; SI Rating: Average) — recently accepted a cash-and- stock offer from Teck Cominco worth about $96 a unit. The deal should close in October, 2008. Note though that unlike most takeovers, Revenue Canada will treat the entire proceeds as ordinary income....