A month later and there is more news coming out.
Earlier in the thread I noted Oasis PR of 4 October, after Japan Catalyst PR on 24 Sep and Silchester on 27 Sep; Orbis followed on 7 Oct

Japan Catalyst: japancatalyst.com/pdf/JCI_NIPPO_…

Silchester: apparently on BBG but I can't find elsewhere now

Orbis: businesswire.com/news/home/2021…
Yesterday one activist set up a website, basically acting as a proxy for the Special Committee of NIPPO, saying that NIPPO would welcome alternative over-bidders to the ENEOS/GS deal.

That's fun.

That's the first time I have seen that.

ft.com/content/94b503…
It actually goes without saying. The deal doc originally said there was no Active Market Check because the Tender Offer Period allowed for alternate bidders to make themselves known as competitors.

That is complete hogwash and everyone knows it.

But this deal is worse.
It is, indeed, odd.

GS' merchant bank in Tokyo does VERY few deals with public companies, and from what I gather very few deals overall. They have a high IRR requirement. Much higher than ENEOS.

So why does the deal structure give 65-75% of the economics to GS? That's odd.
And if they are getting that, it means minorities are getting a bad deal.

And as every one of the objectors pointed out 4-6wks ago (as I did 8wks ago 🥸), ENEOS is conflicted, and the minority of the minority gets to decide. And there was no market check. Bad process.
But what is not being reported on, because it is tough to get confirmation from private parties and it would be complete hearsay now, is that at the same time as ENEOS is effectively selling their sub to GS' merchant bank, GS' merchant bank is selling another asset.

To ENEOS.
And reports of the OTHER sale (the sale of the GS/GIC investment in Japan Renewable Energy) suggest ENEOS was not the high bidder.

There's obviously no proof of quid pro quo, but it's easy to understand why minorities want to take a closer look and ensure a fair process.
The question is whether enough people have complained to NIPPO to get them to take a closer look.

If I had to guess, I would say no.

It is VERY rare that a target co subsidiary of a parent taking it out has the guts to stand up to the parent co in the name of good governance.
But it IS interesting. And one could make the argument that the experience here proves that the process NIPPO undertook to "ensure" fairness to minorities was not fair.

To be clear, it WAS unfair. Blatantly so. But the courts seem uninterested in fairness of process.
Precedent judgment now says lawyers and auditors determining a "process not detrimental to minority shareholders" ensures the price is fair when in fact, the only real input to "price" is what the bidder wants to pay, a DCF based on what the buyer's subsidiary "forecasts", and
multiples out of thin air, and zero questions or fact-checking. The IFA takes what the target gives them, looks at the balance sheet as provided by the target company (w/ notes provided by the target company - all the while we note TargetCo is actually the buyer's subsidiary)...
which sometimes means that cash is cash, and sometimes it means cash is NOT cash. And sometimes it means that govt bond holdings (designed to get cash from Current Assets to LT Assets) turn in to assets which are discounted at 10% rather than assets deducted on Day1. Do TargetCos
sometimes push cash into receivables? Yes.

Do they buy real estate to "hide" the cash? Yes.

Do they count "real estate AFS" (when targetco is not a RE co) as a "business" which should be discounted at 10% rather than an asset with FV at cap rate X? Yes.

They did here.
But add all that up and the Swedish Chef DCF is STILL not used other than as basic support to bound the possibilities. And courts in appraisal cases, for the moment, don't really care about actual value as long as boxes are ticked (unlike Delaware or Germany appraisal processes).
So unlike other markets where activists suit up and make presentations, and call for competing bids, etc... in Japan once a Tender Offer starts, it is usually 30 days (bd).

It requires a little more urgency.
This time we saw an announcement followed by regulatory approval process PRIOR to the Tender Offer being launched, which is why investors have had the luxury of time. But they probably don't have much.

It'll be interesting to see how this plays out.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with baufinanciaphaster 👹

baufinanciaphaster 👹 Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @bauhiniacapital

11 Nov
Brief thread on Evergrande:

Great article. Lots of color.

This is playing out very much as one would have thought (and did) in summer.

wsj.com/articles/everg…
The government has been insisting on a "market-oriented approach" which is a signal they won't publicly bail out the company's capital providers.

In Jully the govt charged the Guangzhou govt with "coordinating" the efforts between creditors and suppliers and the company.
In early August, the Guangzhou intermediate court was charged with being the hub for all debt-related cases against Evergrande.
Read 14 tweets
9 Nov
Holy smokes.

There was a merger vote at an EGM 12 days ago in Japan. The third largest shareholder, who had made an earlier competing takeover proposal (better for the co and shareholders, but not mgmt) objected, as did others.

It passed.

It needed 66.67%. It "just passed."
It was so close it had to go to marksheet voting on the spot.

Meeting ended 1:40pm. Then vote.

Chamber closed at 2 to reconvene at 3.

Vote counted at 2:50. Inspector General of the EGM gets the tally. Tells chairman.

Chairman of the meeting delays restart 'just to be sure'
At 4:10pm, Chairman walks in and says "it passed, by a small margin."

Done. dusted.

Usually, the result is published by the company in a regulatory filing within 1bd, sometimes same day. This took 7 days. When it came out, it was 66.68%.

Remember it needed 66.67%.
Read 8 tweets
7 Nov
A very relevant 🧵.

Understanding the peeves and opportunities as seen by the different age groups in Japan is KEY to understanding the investment landscape.
Some things to think about:
1) Some politicians regularly complain about QE and the BOJ. It is because the elderly own most of the assets and they are frustrated with low income from low rates.
2) Japanese companies care more about their young employees than their old.
3) Japan will end up with too few warm bodies for its ambitions in a couple of decades. The labour shortage will be ‘mitigated’ by
a) FA/RPA
b) off-shoring
c) larger scale farming
d) the elderly working more/longer
e) imported labour
Read 4 tweets
3 Nov
If you are in the Niigata, this is a great garden to view the foliage.
Yesterday:

If you follow the thread lower, you'll see the trend in reverse...

Read 7 tweets
28 Oct
Softbank was the biggest expected sell at a little under US$3bn for passive trackers to sell.

That's a 5min chart over the past week. A bunch of volume will have gotten crossed off-market post-close. Those who look will see a couple of big prints out tomorrow noontime.
It appears as if the baskets didn't trade *that* well (i.e. they were substantially pre-positioned) on the last day and a lot of the big names appear to have run against in the last 5mins.
Those tables are from FFW change announcement day 3wks ago - not today's prices. Quantities should be good tho.
Read 4 tweets
23 Oct
This situation is going to end up being nastier than people think.

reuters.com/world/asia-pac…
The details are not out officially, but the "loser" here ADC (9318 JP) (which is an arm of Sun Hung Kai & Co) apparently didn't have their votes counted (because they are on margin).

They say that if their votes had been counted, it would have gone the other way. ImageImage
The Tokyo District Court will review the case later this coming week and I expect that whoever loses will appeal.

For my part, I think the history and operation of ADC is dodgy.

It comes from Sun Hung Kai's takeover of a large stake in the company when it was called J Bridge,
Read 12 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!

:(