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Jaya Holding

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AnthonyTan
    26-Jan-2012 13:17  
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No concrete confirmation yet.

Appeal no interest from investors.

Care to share?
 
 
AnthonyTan
    26-Jan-2012 10:55  
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Agreed. I am taking a bet on this one.

ozone2002      ( Date: 25-Jan-2012 11:09) Posted:



likely takeover @ 65c by a Dutch firm...

NAV is ard 58c

still at least 10% upside to NAV..

good for a punt..

gd luck~~! DYODD

 
 
ozone2002
    26-Jan-2012 09:48  
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so 65c offer is a steal...

Given Jaya is controlled by a financial investor, there is a possibility that it could be sold " lock stock and barrel" at the right price. Its NAV grew by 16.8% to S$0.72 cents for the financial year ending Jun 2011.

 

 
Nokita
    25-Jan-2012 15:00  
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The CIMB analyst had better get it right, or else...

JAYA 'likely' to be taken over
 
 
ozone2002
    25-Jan-2012 11:09  
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likely takeover @ 65c by a Dutch firm...

NAV is ard 58c

still at least 10% upside to NAV..

good for a punt..

gd luck~~! DYODD
 
 
krisluke
    04-Nov-2011 21:00  
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Jaya: Announced weak 1Q12 results, below estimates, on back of a slow down in shipbuilding. Rev at US$28.5m, -51% yoy, and +68.6% qoq while net profit at US$4.8m, -79% yoy and +22.7% qoq. Gross Margins was however weaker at 29.8% vs 34.7% yoy.

Rev was led by grp’s Offshore Shipping Division whose rev at US$16.0m, +18% yoy, while rev from grp’s Shipbuilding Division of US$12.5m was- 72% yoy. These shifts in rev were consistent with grp’s increased focus on its chartering business.

Higher Offshore Shipping Division’s rev was attributable to higher charter utilisation for the qtr under review at 68% vs 66% yoy, while Fleet size grew to 28 vessels vs 21 yoy. The Shipbuilding Division recorded significantly lower rev as a grp sold only one vessel vs 3 yoy. Lower yoy bottomline was also attributed to other income which fell 92% yoy to $0.64m, due to the disposal of one vessel and translation gains in the previous corresponding qtr.

Valuation remains undemanding with grp trading at 0.58x P/B vs historical average of 2x, and FY12E ROE of 8.5x.
 

 
nickyng
    16-Feb-2011 16:03  
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buy more if u dare ! it will drop < 55cts hee....juz b patience lah ! :P
 
 
knightrider
    16-Feb-2011 15:41  
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Not only hold, buy more to average if you have bullets and dare you !!! LOL.

ngtongnee      ( Date: 16-Feb-2011 15:36) Posted:



is not a reasonable price to sell at such low price.
Let's hold. Ultimately we know it will not become zero value.

Please remember Invest to make money, not dump to loose money.

 
 
ngtongnee
    16-Feb-2011 15:36  
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is not a reasonable price to sell at such low price.
Let's hold. Ultimately we know it will not become zero value.

Please remember Invest to make money, not dump to loose money.
 
 
knightrider
    15-Feb-2011 14:20  
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Walan, now is at S$0.55 liao, buy more id you dare ? Good Luck.
 

 
larosanegra
    15-Feb-2011 10:43  
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The 60cts is the person I quoted... for me, I vested at 57cts :(
 
 
nickyng
    15-Feb-2011 10:36  
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gosh! i hope u hv bullets to keep buying more and at lower price...as it stand 55.5cts now :) i will punt it ONLY when it drop below 55cts ...gd luck to those vested! :P

larosanegra      ( Date: 15-Feb-2011 10:06) Posted:



Quoting a comment by C.C. Low in NRA Capital: Kevin Scully Blog:

" I agree with you Kevin that investors should hold on to their shares and not panic and dump them.

I have explained in my comments on your earlier article on Jaya the mechanics involved in the offer price,.i.e how it was arrived at.

To recant - Jaya's last traded price on Friday was 0.66. Its 2Q financial figures showed outstanding bank debt of approx $335m and total cash & FD of approx $200m. The difference of $135m divided over 772m Jaya shares = 0.18 cents per share, and 0.66 cents minus 0.18 cents = 0.48 cents per share. That was how the offer price was arrived at. Rhe new group of substantial shareholders (acting in concert) are taking over Jaya at zero debt. The offer price of 0.48 does not reflect on the market or intrinsic value of Jaya shares. Another way of looking at it is that they bought over the controlling stake from NOS ar 0.66 cents minus bank debt of 0.18 cents per share that's all. Under the takeover code they have to offer to the rest of the shareholders at their last transacted purchase price of 0.48, which substantially undervalued Jaya in terms of both its assets, its business potential, and goodwill. Technically speaking, they are already enjoying a 20 % book gain based on today's ridiculous closing price of 0.58

Most retail investors who have not done theur homework or bother to do the sums panicked and dump their shares thinking that Jaya was sinking. For those who are still unsure, let it be re-emphasised that it is NOS (the previous controlling shareholder) who is having financial difficulties and not Jaya itself. (There was already some inkling of this sometime in mid 2010 when one item on its agenda (pertaining to rights issue) at the AGM was vetoed by NOS.

As a matter of fact, very early this morning I bought another 20 lots at 0.60 followed by another 20 lots at 0.59 which was a little bit too pre-emptive. I should have waited a little while more.
"


 
 
larosanegra
    15-Feb-2011 10:06  
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Quoting a comment by C.C. Low in NRA Capital: Kevin Scully Blog:

" I agree with you Kevin that investors should hold on to their shares and not panic and dump them.

I have explained in my comments on your earlier article on Jaya the mechanics involved in the offer price,.i.e how it was arrived at.

To recant - Jaya's last traded price on Friday was 0.66. Its 2Q financial figures showed outstanding bank debt of approx $335m and total cash & FD of approx $200m. The difference of $135m divided over 772m Jaya shares = 0.18 cents per share, and 0.66 cents minus 0.18 cents = 0.48 cents per share. That was how the offer price was arrived at. Rhe new group of substantial shareholders (acting in concert) are taking over Jaya at zero debt. The offer price of 0.48 does not reflect on the market or intrinsic value of Jaya shares. Another way of looking at it is that they bought over the controlling stake from NOS ar 0.66 cents minus bank debt of 0.18 cents per share that's all. Under the takeover code they have to offer to the rest of the shareholders at their last transacted purchase price of 0.48, which substantially undervalued Jaya in terms of both its assets, its business potential, and goodwill. Technically speaking, they are already enjoying a 20 % book gain based on today's ridiculous closing price of 0.58

Most retail investors who have not done theur homework or bother to do the sums panicked and dump their shares thinking that Jaya was sinking. For those who are still unsure, let it be re-emphasised that it is NOS (the previous controlling shareholder) who is having financial difficulties and not Jaya itself. (There was already some inkling of this sometime in mid 2010 when one item on its agenda (pertaining to rights issue) at the AGM was vetoed by NOS.

As a matter of fact, very early this morning I bought another 20 lots at 0.60 followed by another 20 lots at 0.59 which was a little bit too pre-emptive. I should have waited a little while more.
"

 
 
knightrider
    15-Feb-2011 10:04  
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I saw still got some joker sell short at S$0.56 yesterday. Must be crazy and bet it will drop to S$0.48 in 1 days time, ha ha ha, this people must be greenhorn just arrived from outer-space.
 
 
Andrew
    15-Feb-2011 09:59  
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I have checked......px now very attractive.  However, profit fell 80% to 6.7M last Q......as reported in ST.

Will not buy now lor......
 

 
knightrider
    15-Feb-2011 09:51  
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Published February 15, 2011

More clarity needed in takeover of Jaya


 

OVER the weekend, a Deutsche Bank-led consortium bought 54.7 per cent of shipping firm Jaya Holdings for $202.6 million, thus triggering a mandatory offer for the rest of Jaya's shares at 48 cents each.

 


The market yesterday reacted in negative fashion by driving Jaya's shares down eight cents or 12 per cent to 58 cents on a volume of 13.5 million, indicating that investors are not overly enamoured with the deal. Clearly, if the new owners are to protect the value of their investment and to win the trust of the market and shareholders, there are important questions that need to be answered.

A likely reason for yesterday's selling is concern over what the future holds under the new owners, given that the current management's position in the takeover has not been clarified.

Moreover, the consortium is led by Deutsche's hedge fund Cathay Asset Management and includes other hedge funds Linden Capital, Orchard Capital and Octavian Advisors. Hedge funds, the market believes, are generally not reputed for being long-term players and could well turn around and sell in the short-term if conditions are right. Quite understandably then and given the absence of sufficient clarity from the new major shareholders, Jaya's shares were sold off yesterday.

Continuity essential

At their peak, Jaya's shares sold for above $2 so given that the company has been extensively restructured and is now profitable, a share price recovery of some description can reasonably be expected. If there is to be a recovery however, continuity is essential - of operations, of existing businesses and most importantly, of management.

However, CAM's statement over the weekend only stated that it and its partners are looking forward to Jaya continuing its existing business and that Jaya looks well-positioned in its market segment but was silent on what relationship the new owners have with Jaya's management.

Is the relationship cordial and if so, will the current management stay and provide the continuity that the market appears to be looking for? Alternatively, if management departs en masse, is there a contingency plan in place, in the form of a suitably-qualified operating partner who can run the business in the interim?

A few other observations are also possible. One is that in a post-sub- prime climate where investment banks are supposed to rein in their risk-taking, it's interesting that Deutsche sees it fit to be at the helm of a large, potentially risky proprietary position.

Hefty discount

It could be that the bank views risk connected to this purchase to be minimal since its entry point is significantly lower than the market price of 66 cents at the time of the announcement. If so, then this leads to another interesting issue - should the seller have held out for a better price?

In this case, the seller was the official receiver (OR) for the stake that was owned by private equity firm Affinity Equity Partners, so it might be argued that like any OR, it sees its primary responsibility as simply raising as much cash as possible as quickly as possible.

And even at a hefty 27.3 per cent discount to the market price, the sum involved of $202.6 million is not insubstantial so it could be that the OR decided that acceptance now is better than waiting indefinitely for an improved offer from someone else later.

Yet Jaya shareholders might argue that their position has been severely disadvantaged by a sale at such a hefty discount. So the question then arises - should ORs bear in mind the welfare of various stakeholders when selling off assets? Or is expediency the overriding criteria?

No matter, since the deal has been struck the most pressing issue is for Jaya's new majority shareholders and management to provide greater clarity as to their plans for the future and what management's role is in those plans. A statement to this effect as soon as possible is perhaps what is needed to prevent the shares from sliding further.

 
 
des_khor
    15-Feb-2011 09:50  
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Will Jaya will become another Longcheer ?
 
 
knightrider
    15-Feb-2011 09:50  
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quoted   from the media : "   the official receiver (OR) for the stake that was owned by private equity firm Affinity Equity Partners" , they sell out the whole stake of 54.X% to this Cathay funds lor !

Some wayang is going on. Why wait for the mandatory offer paper to deliver to share holder @ S$0.48, quick , quick, quick sell in open market, that is what they want you to do!!! Good Luck.
 
 
candle
    15-Feb-2011 09:35  
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who is the joker sold the the bulk to them at 48c
 
 
knightrider
    15-Feb-2011 09:15  
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It is just a wayang, so far they only get 54.x% only,don't accept their offer and on't sell to them, just hold lor, then see how they get over 90%, go rob, ha ha.   LOL

If those want to accept their offer, might just sell now in the open market. This is their game, they want you to sell to them now. I believe there is another 3rd party behind, then later this Cathay may sell to them. Just my own opinion. After all they promised this will not be delisted and will continue to let the business operation as usual.
 
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