SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : Pacific Century CyberWorks (PCW, PCWKF)

 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext  
To: John McDonald who started this subject9/22/2000 11:31:59 AM
From: exxpert  Read Replies (1) of 4541
 
Hello merry, looks like one C&W shareholder is somewhat disturbed by the recent fall of PCCW. If webb-site.com was the only place I was getting my PCCW info from, I would probably be as disturbed as he...

Friday September 22, 10:50 am Eastern Time

MotleyFool.com - Fool News
Cable & Wireless' Raw Deal
By Bill Mann

From the files of "I knew it, I knew it":

Yesterday Cable & Wireless (NYSE: CWP - news) announced that it was selling a
4.9% stake in Pacific Century Cyberworks (NYSE: PCW - news) at a market price of
about HK$9.88 per share (U.S.$1.28), for a total of U.S.$1.3 billion. Cable & Wireless
still holds approximately 15.3% of PCCW as a result of PCCW's purchase of Hong Kong Telecom from Cable & Wireless in
August.

The deal between the two companies was part cash and part stock, with Cable & Wireless getting U.S.$11.3 billion in cash
plus a stake in PCCW that turned out to be 21.4%. C&W then flipped a small portion of its PCCW stake in a stock swap
with CMGI (Nasdaq: CMGI - news) for its shares, leaving it with a 20.2% stake. The trouble is, shares in PCCW have fallen
so fast since the deal was inked in February that Cable & Wireless' current yield is 23% less than the market price for Hong
Kong Tel as of the market close on the day the deal was announced. PCCW's shares have dropped from HK$26.35 per
share (U.S.$3.41) down to HK$8.81 (U.S.$1.14) as the euphoria that surrounded it has dulled significantly.

I wish I hadn't seen this coming. At the time of the PCCW deal, there was another offer to Cable & Wireless on the table, an
all-cash deal from Singapore Telecom. Although PCCW's plans were ambitious, the company had little in the way of
revenues or of assets to back up its proposal to take over the former monopoly carrier of Hong Kong, which C&W was
trying to sell. Nothing except for its fluffed-up stock certificates, made buoyant by the combination of a magical name
(founder Richard Li), an audacious business plan involving the Internet and Asia, some pretty sweet deals from the Hong
Kong government, and an investing public dying to believe.

C&W was trying to get out of Hong Kong. It should have taken the cash deal from SingTel. But no, it was bedazzled by the
same sparkle that helped PCCW catch the fancy of the market. And so it took a cash and stock deal with limitations on
when it could sell the stock. But when would C&W possibly find reason to sell such a fantastic opportunity as ownership
in PCCW?

Not soon enough, apparently. C&W has embargoes placed on its sale of the PCCW stock, with the first 25% having just
unlocked. C&W wasted no time at all to unload it. This leaves another 15% of all available PCCW shares in the hands of a
company that is now demonstrably a motivated seller -- a situation that is bad for both parties. Half of the remaining shares
unlock in February 2001, the remainder six months after that.

As a Cable & Wireless shareholder, I stated from the outset that it should take the bird in hand -- SingTel's cash. Instead,
we're now loaded down with a bunch of PCCW funny money stock, with PCCW loaded down with debt from the
transaction, debt assumed from Hong Kong Tel, and the debt it has incurred to start up its own business.

Something tells me this story's going to get uglier before it gets better. Those who are deeply interested in a skeptic's take
on the PCCW saga should check out the recent article about it at Webb-site, which is run by a former investment banker
based in Hong Kong who has a passion for good corporate governance. Very Foolish!

For more things Foolish, go to the The Motley Fool's complete site! We aim to inform, educate and help you make good
money, Fool. Also, check out the FoolMart, the place to shop for Foolish investing tools. Become a Fool for Motley Fool
stock features, updates, contests, and product discounts!

biz.yahoo.com
Report TOU ViolationShare This Post
 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext