Hi mengtan333,
So you have a view that Sabana Reit will be ok in the long run. Great! Then we can discuss further.
(21-02-2023, 01:30 PM)mengtan333 Wrote: His rationale was that very likely 30-40% of the shareholders will not tender so its very likely upwards of 20-25% of all the shares you have will be successfully tendered at 45 cents which is a high and good price in this market.
I dunno where your remisier got this idea from. So far, there is no single unitholder that came out and say that they will not accept the partial offer outright. So, some unitholders might not take up all their 10%, but you cannot say they won't tender 0.1% to 9.9% of their holdings. Even if some unitholders didn't tender any units, you cannot stop another unitholder tendering 100% of his units. Also, some might buy from the market at 42c and tender everything to the offeror. There is so many combinations going around.
(21-02-2023, 01:30 PM)mengtan333 Wrote: So tendering 40% and then buy back what was successfully tendered at a lower price
This strategy is ok, since you are holding the Reit at this moment and you wish to tender 40% of your current holdings to the partial offer, while attempting to buy back them back at a lower price after the partial offer closes. As I said before, since you have a view on the Reit for long term holding, you should also be mindful that you might suffer short term capital loss for your remaining 60% of the Reit and also some of the 40% of your holdings that you tendered that might not be taken up by the offeror.
(21-02-2023, 01:30 PM)mengtan333 Wrote: or buying the 20-25% at 42 cents and then tendering it out.
This is a bad idea. Because by buying 20-25% more at 42c currently, you are actually increasing your stake in the Reit. You hope that all that you have bought and tendered will be taken up by the offeror. Otherwise, you might suffer capital loss for 100% of your existing holdings plus some of the additional 20-25% more that you have bought, if the unit price drops further after the partial offer closes.
(21-02-2023, 01:30 PM)mengtan333 Wrote: Both he say earn a quick 7-8% instead of not doing anything
This is incorrect. it is 7-8%
realized gain is for those units that you have successfully tendered to the offeror via the partial offer. You might suffer capital loss for your existing holdings plus some of those tendered units that are not taken up by the offeror. So, total return is actually unknown at this moment. By total return, what I meant is realized and unrealized returns.
By not doing anything, those unitholders also have a view. They have a view that the Reit will trade above the partial offer price after the offer closes. That's why they are not doing anything. You also cannot rule that out. Anything is possible.
PS: You might wish to take up the scrip dividend at 42c, since your intention is to tender some of your units via the partial offer.