BCE Confusion Profit

Article Excerpt

BCE $21.90 (Toronto symbol BCE; Shares outstanding: 806.2 million; Market cap: $17.7 billion; SI Rating: Above-Average) was bound to drop following news that its $42.75 takeover bid appears to have died. But it may have dropped more than it deserved. Due to the high price of the takeover and the plunge in stock market values since the setting of that price, accounting firm KPMG felt that, post-takeover, BCE’s tangible assets (that is, excluding goodwill or ‘value-as-a-going-concern’) would fall short of BCE’s post-takeover debt of $43 billion. So it couldn’t provide the solvency opinion that the deal required. That could (and probably will) kill the takeover. Profit from confusion It’s worth noting that many successful companies would fail this test if you excluded the value of their goodwill. But it only matters here since the takeover needs a favourable opinion to go through, and KPMG couldn’t provide one. However, some investors got the mistaken impression that BCE is already insolvent. In fact, BCE now owes…