T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
871.1 | | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, That Group | Tue Jun 06 1995 10:50 | 2 |
| You can't own more than 5% of a given company without having
filed with the SEC.
|
871.2 | Legal hassles for large shareholders | ASDG::HORTON | Paving the Info Highway | Tue Jun 06 1995 13:11 | 6 |
| ...and there are all kinds of knots with which different folks
can tie you up once you go over 5 or 10 percent ownership.
That's why most mutual funds avoid exceeding that percentage
in any particular company (and, hence, why big cap stocks
are so popular with the funds).
|
871.3 | It's hard to get in and out in the open market | EVMS::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Tue Jun 06 1995 13:23 | 16 |
| ... and if you started buying in the open market the price would soon
rise far above what you wanted to pay once word got out you were
buying. (As it would, once you bought more than 5%)
AND THEN, with your fists full of stock, suppose the U.S. "Justice"
department decided you weren't allowed to complete the deal, as
happened in The Intuit Affair. You'd be forced to sell the stock you
had bought at a likely loss. Can you imagine what would happen to
Intuit's price once word got out that Microsoft had to sell 20 million
shares? A stampede for the exits, that's what.
With a tender offer you don't have any such worries. Either you get
what you want at your price, or you're off the hook at relatively
little expense.
John
|
871.4 | | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, That Group | Tue Jun 06 1995 13:40 | 7 |
| > With a tender offer you don't have any such worries. Either you get
> what you want at your price, or you're off the hook at relatively
> little expense.
BTW, in a takeover, or specifically in this case, are they only
after buying 51% of the outstanding shares in order to have
the controlling interest?
|
871.5 | I don't know this case specifically | EVMS::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Tue Jun 06 1995 16:33 | 14 |
| > BTW, in a takeover, or specifically in this case, are they only
> after buying 51% of the outstanding shares in order to have
> the controlling interest?
It depends on the circumstances of the offer. A company may want to buy
ALL the shares tendered, only 51% of the outstanding, or possibly
somewhere in between. In the "51%" case a company will pro-rate all
blocks tendered and buy the same fraction of every block. So you could
tender 1000 shares and end up selling 762, retaining the 238 unbought.
I would not want to hold stock in a company that's >51% controlled by
anybody except me. No chance to throw the bums out.
John
|
871.6 | | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, That Group | Tue Jun 06 1995 17:14 | 7 |
| > It depends on the circumstances of the offer. A company may want to buy
> ALL the shares tendered, .....
What if some shareholders try to hold out? I assume they
aren't allowed to hold out, that the shares no longer
trade, and checks are mailed out to all the shareholders
of record?
|
871.7 | What happens now? | ADISSW::FERRIN | | Mon Jun 12 1995 10:15 | 6 |
|
I have a very basic question about this take over.
If I own say 100 shares of Lotus stock, what happens now?
Do I get the equivalent in IBM shares? Is Lotus Stock still trading?
Doug
|
871.8 | WHY didn't IBM buy-out Microsoft | CSCMA::BALICH | | Wed Jun 21 1995 17:20 | 11 |
|
Here is probably stupid question:
Since IBM bought Lotus, WHY didn't they just buy out Microsoft with
there nearly 11 billion of cash on hand!
Microsoft has only 4.5 billion in sales.
Anybody know why Microsoft wasn't the target of IBM instead of Lotus ?
|
871.9 | | NLA0::ONO | The Wrong Stuff | Wed Jun 21 1995 17:48 | 9 |
| Well, Microsoft has on the order of 625M shares outstanding (per
the 10-Q for 4QCY94). At current prices of about $90/share,
Microsoft's market capitalization is approximately $56B.
Pretty tough to get even a controlling interest for $11B. To take
over a company, you buy its stock. Sales doesn't (really) enter
into the transaction.
Wes
|
871.10 | | QUEK::MOY | Michael Moy, Oracle SQL Engineering, 603-881-1943 | Wed Jun 21 1995 17:55 | 4 |
| I read that the valuation of Microsoft was within $1 billion of IBM
today.
michael
|
871.11 | | NLA0::ONO | The Wrong Stuff | Wed Jun 21 1995 19:26 | 2 |
| Yep. IBM has about 585M shares @ $97/share. About $56.7B market
cap.
|
871.12 | | NLA0::ONO | The Wrong Stuff | Wed Jun 21 1995 19:55 | 3 |
| And for completeness sake, Digital has 144M shares @ $44.50/share
for a market cap of $6.4B. Now, IBM could have bought Digital
for cash.
|
871.13 | | QUEK::MOY | Michael Moy, Oracle SQL Engineering, 603-881-1943 | Wed Jun 21 1995 22:57 | 6 |
| re: .12
Maybe not. Lotus was around $30. IBM offered about double that. Don't
know if this would be the case for Digital too.
michael
|
871.14 | | HDLITE::SCHAFER | Mark Schafer, Alpha Developer's support | Thu Jun 22 1995 10:33 | 4 |
| So, who else has ~$6-20B in cash to buy us? Why limit the field to
IBM?
Mark
|
871.15 | 80% premium would work for me... | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Thu Jun 22 1995 14:34 | 6 |
|
Anybody offers me $80/share for my Digital stock and it's theirs.
On the other hand.....
the Greyhawk
|
871.16 | | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Thu Jun 22 1995 15:24 | 3 |
| ...and for quite a while last year, Microsoft's market capatilization
was actually higher than IBM's. IBM has since zoomed from 40ish to
90ish and that's no longer true.
|
871.17 | | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, That Group | Fri Jun 23 1995 01:24 | 3 |
| Doesn't Bill Gates still own a majority of the stock? If so,
wouldn't that make it impossible to be taken over unless Gates
goes along?
|
871.18 | | GUIDUK::ONO | The Wrong Stuff | Fri Jun 23 1995 13:51 | 2 |
| Per the 1994 proxy statement, Gates held almost 25% of the stock.
Paul Allen held 9.9%, Steve Ballmer 5.2%
|