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Strategies & Market Trends : Speculating in Takeover Targets -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: richardred who wrote (1682)4/23/2007 1:21:02 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 7256
 
Top Tech Takeover Targets

By James Altucher
Stockpickr.com
Many tech companies are ripe for acquisition. They have a ton of cash, generated both from profits and the over-exuberant IPO market of the late 90s. They have increasing cash flows due to the ever expanding need for all things Internet (content, connectivity, computational power), and there are many natural buyers:

Cisco (CSCO), Oracle (ORCL), Microsoft (MSFT), Google (GOOG), Symantec (SYMC), EMC (EMC) and others are all making multi-billion dollar acquisitions. They are flush with cash and don’t know what to do with it other than to attempt to dominate the world through more acquisitions.

Private equity – There’s one trillion dollars cash lying on the sidelines that has to be put to work within the next three to five years. Private equity firms don’t buy shares. They buy companies.

Themselves – Many of the targets I identify below are already doing share buybacks, in effect, quietly taking themselves private.
At Stockpickr.com we’ve identified 15 companies that fit the criteria that make a takeover a slam dunk at current values. See the link to the right for our full list. See below for some of the companies we’ve identified, plus analysis:

Akamai Technologies (AKAM):

Akamai is a perfect company to get acquired by Cisco, particularly after its recent acquisition of WebEx at 15 times cash flows, which provides IP-based video conferencing for the enterprise. When the Internet was just blossoming, it was simply enough to get your information from your computer out into the world beyond. And that is what Cisco was great at with their first major product, their routers.

But now with the audience fully matured and demanding video (e.g., WebEx), the companies that speed up the last mile of transmission of Web content will become increasingly valuable. Akamai is the leader in this area.

Akamai takes content (for instance, your Web site) off of your local hosting service and distributes it across the world so that whoever wants your content will have to take as few hops as possible to find it. At 15 times cash flows, Akamai trades exactly in line with where WebEx was trading when Cisco acquired it.

And I’m not the only one who thinks so. Super hedge fund manager and former George Soros protégé Stanley Druckenmiller owns shares of Akamai. Druckenmiller was running Soros’s fund in 1992 when he pulled the trigger on the trade that became famous for “breaking the bank” in England. That day, the pound reached a 20-year low as a result (many believe) of Soros and Druckenmiller’s machinations. Now he’s loading up on Akamai.

United Online (UNTD):

What!? A declining, old school, dial-up Internet service provider? Most people don’t realize that United Online has quietly been building one of the largest social networks around, Classmates.com. All of United’s profit growth comes from Classmates.com. Also, United’s cash flows are immense. Let’s look at the basic numbers: A $932 million market cap and $162 million cash in the bank with no debt, giving it an enterprise value of $770 million. With operating earnings of $154 million, United trades at just five times cash flows.

The situation reminds me of Ask Jeeves which was trading for seven times cash flows right before Interactive Corp. (IACI) bought it for a 20% premium. The Classmates.com asset is too huge to ignore with traffic doubling every year. Consequently, United’s content and media division posted a 33% revenue increase when compared to the year ago period in its most recent quarter. Additionally, United pays out a 5.7% dividend, making it the highest yielding tech company that I track.

Again, it’s interesting to see who is looking past the stigma of the “dialup services provider” label that has plagued United among Wall Street analysts. Quant-driven Renaissance Technologies owns 4.2% of the stock. According to Trader Monthly magazine, Jim Simons the manager of Renaissance, made between $1.5 billion and $2 billion for himself last year, tying for number one on the list of the top earning hedge fund managers. Renaissance has consistently posted 30%+ returns since its inception 20 years ago. At Stockpickr, we track Renaissance’s holdings and you can track them as well with the link to the right.

Intuit (INTU)

Intuit, through its QuickBooks software and various tax packages, provides financial management and tax solutions to small business, consumers, and accountants. This would be a perfect latch-on for Oracle since it is primarily catering to large businesses but is starting to face competition on the small business end from MySQL. Intuit would be a great foot in the door for Oracle to get in the small business. Microsoft has also long been rumored to have an eye on nabbing Intuit.

Intuit trades at 11.5 times cash flows and has almost $1 billion net cash in the bank. Analysts expect earnings per share to go from $1.37 in the fiscal year ending July 2007 to $1.58 per share in fiscal 2008. Interestingly, Renaissance Technologies also is a believer in Intuit’s prospects, owning $94 million worth of the company. My theory on Renaissance is that they have modeled out the returns gained by buying stocks with heavy amounts of cash, little debt, and low multiples over cash flows, hence their investments in companies like United and Intuit.

Cold Cash

As an aside, several years ago I applied for a job at Renaissance. A friend of mine who ran a fund of funds told me that they had a very statistics-oriented approach. “They even model out what happens to the market when there’s a blizzard outside.” Ok, I thought. I can do that. So I created the “Blizzard System” for Stockpickr.com that answers the question, “what does the market do when there is more than five inches of snow on Central Park.” See the link to the “Blizzard System” on the right. I wrote to Jim Simons and had a nice back and forth with him but, alas, they only hire Ph.D.s and I unfortunately had been thrown out of graduate school. But that’s another story.

Over the next year many technology and Internet companies are going to get acquired. Suddenly investors will look around for tech stocks and they’ll realize that the supply of technology shares that trade on the markets are severely depleted. This is a precondition for the next bubble, when demand begins to greatly outstrip supply. That bubble will be created by the enormous liquidity that is on the sidelines right now but will be moving into the market over the next year.

James Altucher, founder and CEO of Stockpickr.com, author of the book, "Trade Like Warren Buffett", and partner at Formula Capital



To: richardred who wrote (1682)4/23/2007 2:16:57 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 7256
 
Bank of America to Acquire LaSalle Bank
Monday April 23, 1:36 pm ET
By Ieva M. Augstums, AP Business Writer
Bank of America to Buy LaSalle Bank for $21 Billion, Enters Chicago Area

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -- A year after making a successful $34.2 billion move into credit cards, Bank of America Corp. found yet another multibillion opportunity to grab more customers.
The Charlotte-based bank said Monday it will purchase LaSalle Bank Corp. from ABN Amro North America Holding Co. for $21 billion in cash.

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The deal, initially announced by ABN Amro Monday when the Dutch bank agreed to sell itself to Barclays for nearly $91.2 billion, fills a big hole in the bank's nationwide branch network by making it Chicago's largest bank.

It also raises questions about Bank of America, who is up against a federal cap that bars it from making acquisitions that would give it more than 10 percent of all U.S. deposits. The bank, which is the nation's second-largest after Citigroup, recently controlled just over 9 percent.

"I think there is a huge opportunity here, but the near-term costs are what people initially see," said Jefferson Harralson, an equity analyst with Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Inc. in Atlanta. "Long term, it's a great strategic move for them."

The net cost to Bank of America will be $16 billion after a return of $5 billion in excess capital.

Bank of America said it expects the deal to immediately enhance its earnings per share and about $800 million in after-tax cost savings. Restructuring costs also are expected to be around $800 million, the bank said.

Investors and Wall Street offered mixed reactions, sending shares of Bank of America down 63 cents or more than 1 percent to $50.41 in afternoon trading on the New York Stock Exchange.

Analysts at Friedman, Billings, Ramsey & Co. said "we like this deal, particularly as this strengthens BofA in the third-largest deposit market in the U.S.," referring to Chicago. They maintained their "outperform" rating on the stock.

For the past several months, Bank of America Chairman and Chief Executive Ken Lewis has expressed his bank's interest in the Chicago market, particularly the strength of LaSalle, in speeches and conference presentations.

While not desiring to be the leader in every market in the U.S., "Chicago is attractive to us," Lewis said during a call with analysts. "The opportunity arose and we acted."

Chicago-based LaSalle is a top-20 U.S. bank holding company, with $113 billion total assets.

The combination of LaSalle and Bank of America creates a leading banking franchise in Chicago, the No. 3 banking market in the United States, and in Michigan. Together the banks would surpass current market leader JPMorgan Chase & Co. in Chicago and set up a battle with that bank, the nation's third-largest.

In the last four years, Bank of America has increased its retail presence in Chicago from a single financial center to 56 locations. Once combined with LaSalle's 141 Chicago area offices, Bank of America will have more than 14 percent of the deposit market share in Chicago.

The purchase, which is expected to close later this year, also will mark Bank of America's retail branch entry in Michigan, where it will have 264 offices and be the largest bank with a 23 percent deposit market share. Bank of America also will acquire LaSalle's six offices in Indiana.

While Chicago has experienced a surge in bank branches, Michigan has suffered economically from a loss of auto industry jobs. Last month, Comerica Inc. said it will move its banking headquarters to Dallas from Detroit to be closer to its faster-growing markets.

"The Detroit franchise is going to be a challenge to grow because of the economic backdrop," Harralson said.

Analysts also are questioning how Bank of America will get around the federal deposit cap law.

In 2004, the bank acquired FleetBoston Financial. A year ago it added millions of names to its ledger through its purchase of credit card issuer MBNA Corp. Currently, the bank has pending purchases of wealth management company U.S. Trust Corp. and a stake in the student lender SLM Corp., known as Sallie Mae.

Last month, when the Federal Reserve Board approved Bank of America's plan to buy U.S. Trust, it said the buyer held $612 billion in deposits, or 9.1 percent of the U.S. total before the purchase. With LaSalle's approximately $57 billion deposits and U.S. Trust's $9.4 billion deposits, the bank would appear to be slightly over the 10 percent threshold.

Bank officials said they are confident they can meet the requirements.

"We will not plan on changing our retail deposit strategy," Lewis said.

Ganesh Rathnam, a banking analyst with Chicago-based Morningstar, said the bank will more than likely just "not pay as high on their CDs as other banks do," thereby meeting the requirement, he said.

In all, Bank of America had $1.46 trillion in assets at the end of 2006, second only to chief rival Citigroup Inc. -- the nation's largest financial services company with $1.88 trillion in assets.



To: richardred who wrote (1682)4/21/2008 3:50:28 AM
From: richardred  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 7256
 
Wendy's rejects offers, says Peltz "misleading"
Friday April 18, 6:24 pm ET
By Lisa Baertlein

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Wendy's International Inc (NYSE:WEN - News) rejected a cash and stock takeover bid and an offer to combine with Arby's, billionaire Nelson Peltz's businesses said on Friday as the hamburger chain argued both offers were low.

Wendy's board has been weighing a sale since last June and on Friday said Peltz was misleading shareholders.

The activist with just under 10 percent of shares has pressed for better financial performance from the No. 3 hamburger chain, which is losing ground to McDonald's Corp (NYSE:MCD - News) and Burger King Holdings Inc (NYSE:BKC - News).

Peltz's Triarc Cos Inc (NYSE:TRY - News) and Trian Fund Management on Friday said they proposed combining Wendy's and Arby's, a sandwich chain owned by Triarc.

They also offered to buy 100 percent of Wendy's "for over $900 million in cash with the balance in stock," Peter May, an executive at both Triarc and Trian, said in a letter addressed to Wendy's Chairman James Pickett and included in a regulatory filing on Friday.

But Pickett said Trian and Triarc failed to reveal how the proposed deals would value Wendy's.

"We believe that is very misleading to our shareholders unless they also know that the value you ascribed to Wendy's in such proposal was significantly below a level we had previously told you very clearly would be unacceptable," he said in a letter addressed to May and filed with U.S. securities regulators.

Analysts said there was not enough information about offer prices to make a judgment on whether the company's directors did the right thing.

"It's hard from the outside looking in to know whether Wendy's board made the appropriate decision," said Morningstar analyst John Owens, who noted that the company's market value, about $2.2 billion, is more than twice the $900 million cash portion of one of the Peltz offers.

In November, Peltz entities said they made a bid for Wendy's that was below the $37 a share to $41 a share it was prepared to offer in July. Since then, they have announced that they plan to gain control of Wendy's board.

TAKEOVER FINANCING QUESTIONS

While Wendy's directors have mulled a sale, money to finance such deals has dried up as loans to poorly qualified U.S. homeowners have gone bad, pinching big banks and other sources of cash.

"I think the prospect of a takeover has diminished significantly," said Standard & Poor's equity analyst Mark Basham, who put a "sell" rating on Wendy's shares after the mergers and acquisitions market shut down last summer.

Earlier this month, Wendy's said first-quarter sales at restaurants open at least 15 months fell, hurt by bad weather and an early Easter.

Sales were down 0.1 percent at franchised restaurants and 1.6 percent at company-owned locations, the company said.

Shares in Wendy's, which have shed around one-fourth of their value in the last year, gained 1.1 percent to close at $25.38 on the New York Stock Exchange.

(Reporting by Brad Dorfman in Chicago, Nicole Maestri in New York and Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles; Editing by Brian Moss and Tim Dobbyn)

biz.yahoo.com