(21-12-2010, 04:14 PM)Musicwhiz Wrote: In my opinion, one of the ways to spot an impending runaway bull is when people start to think more about making money than preserving capital. This may look tough to spot on the outset but if one observes other stocks/shares forums more closely, one can notice the general tone of the participants. Talking to actual people about how they feel on making money or getting a decent return will also give some indication as to whether things are really heating up.
Personally, I've noticed more and more people looking out for "üpside"instead of protecting their downside. Perhaps we will see more and more of this in 2011.
friends,
a bit of an educational and warning post for those of you that are not yet proficient in analysing companies ( actually this also includes many so called "analysts")
I am not usually a fan of small cap investing especially those in the SGX market given their low quality in general , out of curiousity i looked at some of the recent small cap IPOs small caps and was shocked to say the least! Absolute robbery!
let me take china eratat as an example (other more recent ones are much worse) to illustrate what i mean:
This fashion company sold its share to the public at 30cents which means the company was valued at IPO at 124m$ given 414m shares outstanding after the IPO.
Now, the first question a smart and sceptical investor will ask is how much did it cost the owners to own a piece of their company, diving into the DILUTION section of their IPO prospectus will reveal that a mysterious "hero win" comprising 2 gentlemen own 212m shares at a mere 2.2 cents per share or 4.6m for 50% of the company!!
another "sterling coleman" was given 37m shares for 40k or .1cent per share! pre-ipo investors a very strange group with names sounding like funds paid 22.5cents, however not looks to be kosher here as no fund worth its name would pay that price, not a single name can be verified, finally the biggest suckers the public pays the grand price of 30cents, in other words whoever paid this price was paying 124m for the company.
what did that the public get for 124m? let u take a gander at their balance sheet:
actually there is nothing to look at here! it is the emptiest balance sheet ever- in terms of fixed assets there is only 2.5m$ of PPE, the liquidation value of which is likely to be close to zero, current assets are full of "amounts due from xxx" type entries and a grand cash balance of 800k!
liabilities is meatier with short term borrowings of 8m$ which incidentally is equal to their entire 2007 net profits, so the IPO money will certainly come in handy, for some strange reason they also have a "dividend payable" as a liability of another 5m, which probably is a euphemism for shareholder loan or something of that sort
all this leaves the buyer of the company with a princely sum of 6m$ in reserves or a book value of 1.4cents per share (6m/415m share post ipo), this is as per the march 2007 audited results, the sept 2007 one seems window dressed for the IPO but even here the NAV is only 8m$.
Would you pay 124m$ for such a company? actually you would, this is a super company in terms of earnings in 2007 as per their prospectus they made 8m$ on equity of 8m so 100% return! warren buffett would kill for such a company!
anyway, i will leave the earnings tricks for another post, but let me finish by making a general comment here and a warning to "value investors" who get seduced by cheap small caps
don't make the mistake of thinking just because these companies have a high degree of inside ownership their interests are aligned with yours- THE TRICK IS THAT THEIR COST IS MUCH DIFFERENT TO YOURS , i just gave you the numbers for this company, look at any recent ipo and you will see that the owners got their stakes for a pittance all the owner has to do is "place " out 5% of his stake and he will make an obscene profit and would not care less if the company goes bankrupt, taking China Eratat's
example the owners of the company 2 gentlemen from "hero win" paid 4.6m for 212m shares or half the company which at IPO time was worth 62m, so they have multiplied their stake by 13X, do you think they give a hoot if the price of the shares dip 30 or 40%? they will simply place out a few million shares at even 15cents before the customery delisting because of "continued undervaluation"!
long post but hope you learnt something you are unlikley to find in analyst reports
cheers