Showing posts with label Citigroup. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Citigroup. Show all posts

Monday, November 03, 2008

Face off.........

来自摩根大通的预期显示,在未来的三年,蒙牛乳业的业绩将遭遇滑铁卢,预计2008年净利润较上年下降88%至1.216亿元,2009年和2010年料净亏损2.669亿元和2.226亿元。

而来自内蒙古自治区政府的数据显示,乳业因三聚氰胺遭受的损失惨重。据一份来自内蒙古的数据显示,伊利、蒙牛下架产品价值已达64亿元,预计未来还将损失36亿元人民币,企业订单减少八成,日收奶量不足原来的五分之一。

“蒙牛的资金的确很紧张,我们已经从预备费中各拿出5000万元分别对蒙牛和伊利进行救助,此外还准备免除两家企业未来四个月的增值税。”内蒙古政府一位人士对记者说。

在产品下架及召回让蒙牛损失了近50亿元之外,在9月23日,蒙牛乳业在港交所复牌,当日即暴跌60.25%,蒙牛总裁牛根生等高管持股市值单日缩水就达49.4亿港元,而此后,由于国际金融危机,蒙牛乳业的股价同样未能企稳。

而 此时,国际投行从之前的一致唱多到现在开始一致唱空。如美林预计,蒙牛2008年亏损1800万元,目标价由15港元降至9.09港元;摩根大通甚至按照 净资产估值给出了3.8港元的目标价。10月31日,蒙牛乳业股价仍然延续了跌势,已经跌到7.5港元左右。而蒙牛乳业年内的最高价曾达到34港元。

在一位不愿具名的分析师看来,继续唱空蒙牛,也许正是投行们为了配合逢低收购蒙牛股票而演出的大戏。“在二级市场暴跌的股票虽然给投资者带来了巨大损失,但也给虎视眈眈的外资以绝好的机会。中国上空有两只秃鹫,一个是产业资本,一个是金融资本,现在都飞到内蒙古了。”


如瑞银,目前持有的蒙牛乳业股份为12.23%,摩根大通持有5.77%,澳邦银行持有5.8%,花旗4.89%。

而在此时,瑞银 的动作颇为引人注目。蒙牛最大的机构股东瑞银日前发表研究报告称,维持对蒙牛的卖出评级,同时决定将蒙牛目标价由11.55港元下调至7.44港元。报告 进一步称,决定依次分别下调蒙牛乳业2008~2010年的每股盈利至0.33元、0.33元和0.47元。

然而,与其他投行纷纷坚持蒙牛乳业股票不同,瑞银却一面唱空一面做多。8月22日,瑞银持股比例为7.99%,在蒙牛停牌前后曾减持至7.71%,但在持续对蒙牛唱空之后,到9月25日,瑞银却突然买入,持股比例达到12.23%。


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Tuesday, March 25, 2008

The Rise & Fall of Bear Stearns

Is it a bull, is it a bear? No, it's Bear Stearns!! (Bear Stearns is 5th largest Investment Bank in US while Lehmann Brothers ranked No. 4).

From USD 2.84 (1985) to USD 159.36 before the sharp fall due to subprime crisis, with the offer from JP Morgan of USD 2 per share about a week ago to revised USD 10 yesterday. If you the one of the shareholder, how you feel? Bear in mind that Bear Stearns Book Value (BV) is about USD 84 per share.


"You also have to consider the massive writeoffs that the Street has taken. Thus far, Citigroup has taken $32 billion in writedowns related to the subprime crisis. Merrill Lynch's writedowns have totaled $22 billion. So were Citi's 2006 profits really the reported $21.2 billion, and were Merrill's the reported $7.5 billion? Or was some percentage of that an illusion? If Bear can be sold for $2 or $10 a share, then how solid was Bear Stearns' $84 per share in reported book value?

Thought about more broadly, if commentators are right that mortgage losses alone will total $300 billion to $500 billion, then, as Inker writes, "profits that look like they have been 2.25% of GDP in the past several years have actually been more like 1.75%, if we smooth the losses over the last 3 years and into next year as rough justice." And of course, mortgage losses are only a subset of the total losses.

Think back to what Ken Lewis, the CEO of Bank of America (BAC, Fortune 500), said last fall when his company announced its first round of writedowns: "Making money for several years, only to give most of it back in one year, is not a brilliant business model."

Inker says that the data doesn't point to any firm conclusions about what the level of financial profits should be. His best guess, though, is that a "normal" level of profits would be about half the amount that the financial sector reported in 2006.

Then, you also have to think about the multiple of those earnings that investors should be willing to pay. In a paper published in the fall of 2005, risk management gurus Leslie Rahl and Barbara Lucas of Capital Markets Risk Advisors, noted that in the past decade, a lot of things have happened that aren't supposed to happen, from the interest rate hikes of 1994 to the 1998 collapse of LTCM to the 2001 terrorist attacks. Or as the authors put it, "once-in-a-lifetime events seem to occur every few years."

If that's the case and if such events now mean that Bear Stearns (BSC, Fortune 500) can go from seemingly viable to threatening to bring down the entire financial system in the space of a week - then what sort of multiple should investors pay for Bear, or for any financial firm? Maybe investors shouldn't pay 12 times earnings, and maybe they should pay a discount to, rather than a multiple of, reported book value.

Of course, trying to guess how this will play out is just that - guessing. But if you say, for instance, that Merrill's normalized profits would be half the 2006 level, you get to about $4 billion. If you think that we should be willing to pay a smaller multiple for those earnings than we did in the past - let's be generous and say 10 times - then you get to a total market value for Merrill Lynch of $40 billion. That's still a 10% discount from today's valuation."

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What about if you bought the shares based on rumour that Warren Buffett might take minority stake of Bear Stearns in September 2007 when the price is about USD 123 per share?

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