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In the
summer of 2007, the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan agreed to buy BCE (a phone
company) for an absurd price of C$52 billion ($42 billion). The deal was
supposed to close December 11. Now the deal appears to be falling through
over solvency issues.
The Canadian Press is reporting BCE says Teachers'
buyout 'unlikely to proceed' if solvency opinion not improved.
Bell Canada's roller coaster ride to privatization may finally crash under the weight of its prospective
massive debt after an accounting firm raised serious doubt that the world's
largest leveraged corporate buyout could succeed.
Bell parent BCE Inc. (BCE) said Wednesday a KPMG analysis indicated the
company could not meet solvency tests in the agreement under which the
company will be acquired by an investor group led by the Ontario Teachers'
Pension Plan.
The opinion marked the latest hurdle for the $52-billion cash and debt deal,
the largest takeover in Canadian history.
BCE said it disagrees, but "should KPMG be unable to deliver a
favourable opinion on Dec. 11, 2008. (when the takeover is slated to close),
the transaction is unlikely to proceed."
Shares in the company were hammered down in heavy trading to their lowest
level in six years. After falling to $23, they closed at $25.25, a drop of
$13.10 or 34.16 per cent on the Toronto Stock Exchange.
KPMG indicated BCE meets solvency tests under its current capital structure -
but would not after being weighted down with the debt involved in the
proposed takeover. In coming to its conclusion, KPMG assessed the value of
BCE's future liabilities and assets that have eroded with the market
meltdown.
BCE's underfunded pension liabilities are believed to be one of several
challenges faced by the Montreal company.
Elliott Soifer, vice-president of Desjardins Securities International, said
he doubts the deal can be salvaged by altering terms, including the $42.75
purchase price.
But industry observers believe Teachers' and the consortium of banks are
likely delighted by the KPMG opinion because it potentially clears a path to
extricate themselves from a tightly written deal that was signed when market
conditions were much brighter.
They are also said not to be on the hook for a $1.2-billion break fee,
although the parties are expected to pay tens of millions of dollars in
banking and legal fees.
Citigroup and
Toronto-Dominion Off The Hook Too
Bloomberg is reporting Citigroup,
Toronto-Dominion Gain on BCE Transaction.
Citigroup
Inc., Toronto-Dominion Bank and Deutsche Bank AG gained after BCE Inc. said
its C$52 billion ($42 billion) takeover may collapse, helping the banks avert
potential writedowns from financing the world’s second- largest
leveraged buyout.
Citigroup, Toronto-Dominion, Deutsche Bank and Royal Bank of Scotland Group
Plc are on the hook for about $34 billion for financing the BCE takeover,
according to regulatory filings. The banks face potential writedowns because
the global credit crisis has pushed down loan values, and made it harder for
the lenders to find other banks willing to take on some of the debt.
The lenders have already taken writedowns from the credit crisis. The U.S. government agreed on Nov. 23 to support Citigroup with a $20 billion capital injection
and a shield against losses on $306 billion of loans. Toronto-Dominion was
forced to sell as much as C$1.38 billion in common shares this week to shore
up its balance sheet after posting trading losses.
“It would have been nearly impossible,” to sell the loans, said
Ron Mayers, vice chairman and head of alternative strategies of Desjardins
Securities Inc. in Montreal. “Obviously that had negative financial
implications for them.”
The buyout group led by the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan agreed to
buy BCE in June 2007. Toronto-based Ontario Teachers’ is the largest
shareholder of Montreal-based BCE.
Previously the
Québec Pension Plan (Caisse) and the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan
were on the hook for some $33 billion in ABCP. See 20 Canadian ABCP
Trusts File Bankruptcy.
Where there's slush, figure Citigroup and the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan
will be deep in it.
Leveraged Buyout Boom Is Over
Bloomberg is reporting LBO Boom’s
Last Vestiges Would Disappear With BCE Deal’s Demise.
The
C$52 billion ($42 billion) purchase of BCE Inc. by private-equity firms may
collapse, erasing the last vestiges of a leveraged-buyout boom that ground to
a halt almost 18 months ago.
The BCE deal, led by Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan, Madison Dearborn
Partners LLC and Providence Equity Partners Inc, is biggest remnant of a
record $1.42 trillion of LBOs in 2006 and 2007. Its demise would be more
evidence of how private- equity firms have shifted from multibillion-dollar
buyouts to shopping for distressed companies amid a dearth of financing and a
deepening global recession.
“BCE is really an Old World transaction,” said Randy Schwimmer,
senior managing director and head of capital markets of New York-based
Churchill Financial LLC. “In the New World, private equity buyers are
looking to tease out value wherever it can be found, whether that’s in
smaller new issues, distressed paper or mining their own portfolios.”
Announced private-equity deals have dropped more than 70 percent to $202
billion so far this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The
biggest transaction this year was the $7 billion stake bought by investors
led by TPG Inc. in Washington Mutual Inc. That investment evaporated five
months later when the U.S. government seized Washington Mutual’s
assets, wiping out the TPG-led group’s $2 billion in equity.
At least $55 billion of LBOs have fallen apart since last year. The botched
transactions include J.C. Flowers & Co.‘s agreement to buy SLM
Corp., the student lender known as Sallie Mae; casino operator Penn National
Gaming Inc.‘s deal with Fortress Investment Group LLC; and KKR’s
plan to buy Harman International Industries Inc.
“It’s easy to imagine a scenario where we don’t have
normalized markets again until 2011,” said Sean Ryan, an analyst at Sterne, Agee & Leach in New York. He pointed to the 1988 purchase by KKR of RJR
Nabisco Inc., the $30 billion which stood as the biggest LBO on record until
2006.
“After all, how many years did it take for RJR Nabisco to get
eclipsed?” Ryan said.
BCE Weekly Chart
The Ontario Teachers'
Pension Plan is the largest shareholder of BCE. If the deal collapses, the
teachers can thank their lucky stars they are not the only shareholder.
Canada May Have First Deficit Since 1997
While on the subject of Canada, inquiring minds are noting Canada May Project
First Deficit Since 1997
Canadian
Finance Minister Jim Flaherty probably will project the government’s
first deficit in 13 years today as revenue evaporates, and may confirm the
world’s eighth-biggest economy is on the brink of a recession.
“Don’t worry about the deficits,” said Mike McCracken,
chairman of forecasting company Informetrica Ltd. in Ottawa.
At a meeting this month of the Group of 20 industrialized and emerging
economies in Washington, International Monetary Fund Managing Director
Dominique Strauss-Kahn urged nations to inject stimulus worth 2 percent of
gross domestic product. For Canada, that would represent about C$30 billion.
Harper himself said the day before that Canada would run a
“short-term” deficit to stimulate the economy if necessary,
though he would seek to avoid a series of deficits that would outlast a
period of sluggish growth.
The government must help companies in the auto industry immediately, because “they
might run out of money within weeks, and it’s quite possible
they’ll be bankrupt if we wait until February,” John McCallum, a
Liberal Party legislator and former chief economist with Royal Bank of
Canada, said yesterday.
“We’re seeing consumers being very careful with their spending --
they’ll fix something when it breaks, but when it can wait, it
waits,” said Richard Roy, president of Boucherville, Quebec-based
automotive-parts distributor Uni- Select Inc.
“All the economists who seem worth listening to are saying you have to
spend in order to get out of a situation like this,” said Laura
Singleton, 49, a homemaker visiting Parliament with her family from Rainy River, Ontario. “My understanding is that we aren’t doing any measures
like that at the moment. I am wondering why.”
Don't Worry About
Deficits Just Spend
Financial insanity is nearly everywhere you look.
CBCNews is reporting Flaherty hints at early budget to stimulate
economy.
Finance
Minister Jim Flaherty may table the next federal budget early to include
infrastructure spending and other provisions to stimulate the ailing economy.
He said any package could be included in a sooner-than-scheduled budget, although
he did not give a specific date. His officials also suggested that announcing
stimulus measures before the next budget is a possibility.
Flaherty noted that the government has already committed to a $33-billion
infrastructure fund that needed to begin releasing money sooner rather than
later.
On Sunday, at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation group's summit in Lima,
Prime Minister Stephen Harper made similar comments that the economy appears
headed for a technical recession and might have already slowed to "just
about zero" growth.
Harper also suggested during the summit that the Canadian government will
introduce a stimulus package to boost the economy, while trying to avoid
setting the stage for a long-term government deficit.
Signalling a shift in his usual anti-deficit stance, he acknowledged that
countries that choose to implement fiscal stimulus packages will likely find
it necessary to run budgetary deficits.
The prime minister noted, however, that whatever short-term new spending his
government pursues, it "will ensure that Canada does not return to
long-term structural budgetary deficits."
Canadian Reality
The reality is Canada is in a recession, that recession is going to pick up
steam, and there is nothing Canada can do about it that makes any sense.
Mish
GlobalEconomicAnalysis.blogspot.com
Mish's Global Economic
Trend Analysis
Thoughts on the great inflation/deflation/stagflation
debate as well as discussions on gold, silver, currencies, interest rates,
and policy decisions that affect the global markets.
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