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This page contains all of the posts and discussion on MemeStreams referencing the following web page: Verizon's Slim Deal. You can find discussions on MemeStreams as you surf the web, even if you aren't a MemeStreams member, using the Threads Bookmarklet.

Verizon's Slim Deal
by dmv at 11:22 am EDT, Apr 11, 2005

] "There can be no reason for the board to support an offer
] to MCI owners that is substantially inferior to what
] Verizon has just agreed to pay for a non-control block of
] stock," Miller said in the letter, which was made public
] late Saturday. "Shareholders would be outraged if the
] Board did less than insist that the identical terms be
] made available to all other owners. That, of course,
] implies a higher value than the $25.72 cash price Mr.
] Slim will receive, since he will have the use of that
] cash shortly, while other MCI owners would have to wait
] until closing if Verizon offered the same price,
] including the same effective call option on Verizon's
] stock. Our rough calculation of the present value of what
] Verizon agreed to pay Mr. Slim, including the call, is in
] excess of $27.00."

How crazy this all is.

Brief recap:
* Qwest makes generous offer to buy MCI. MCI says No.
* Verizon makes low offer to buy MCI. MCI says Yes.
* Shareholders say Qwest. MCI says No. Shareholders say "lawsuit".
* Verizon makes a slightly better offer ($23.10/share). MCI says Yes.
* Qwest makes more generous offer ($27.50/share). MCI says No. Shareholders say WTF
* Verizon makes deal to buy 13% stake from prominent billionare investor (make the takeover easier). Offers $25.72 plus an option. MCI says... nothing. Shareholders say WTF.

Why is this significant? This is MCI executives probably behaving badly. MCI, the company known as Worldcom. What a shock. Here are the forces in motion: MCI shareholders, post bankruptcy, are value players who saw a buyout as inevitable and lucrative. They are looking for the best price. Qwest wants to buy MCI for its customer list -- and needs to have it to survive, so it will pay whatever it takes. Verizon sees big market assets cheap. MCI execs see themselves without jobs if Qwest buys, and sweet offers of something from Verizon. So, 20% premium be damned.

I think it was in really bad taste for Verizon to make this side offer. They want a voting block (13% is as big as they can get before the poison pills) to help the merger. But they can't sweet talk an investor out of an equity position -- not someone who lost in the debt-equity conversion post-scandal. So they had to make a reasonably attractive offer. Not like the one for the rest of the company.

It will be fun to watch the justifications for why they have a higher price for a non-majority share than the company. Or how the MCI people continue to say it is the best deal they could get for the company, despite the obvious evidence that they are selling it cheaper than the buyer is willing to pay. Gross.


 
RE: Verizon's Slim Deal
by flynn23 at 6:35 pm EDT, Apr 12, 2005

dmv wrote:
] ] "There can be no reason for the board to support an offer
] ] to MCI owners that is substantially inferior to what
] ] Verizon has just agreed to pay for a non-control block of
] ] stock," Miller said in the letter, which was made public
] ] late Saturday. "Shareholders would be outraged if the
] ] Board did less than insist that the identical terms be
] ] made available to all other owners. That, of course,
] ] implies a higher value than the $25.72 cash price Mr.
] ] Slim will receive, since he will have the use of that
] ] cash shortly, while other MCI owners would have to wait
] ] until closing if Verizon offered the same price,
] ] including the same effective call option on Verizon's
] ] stock. Our rough calculation of the present value of what
] ] Verizon agreed to pay Mr. Slim, including the call, is in
] ] excess of $27.00."
]
] How crazy this all is.
]
] Brief recap:
] * Qwest makes generous offer to buy MCI. MCI says No.
] * Verizon makes low offer to buy MCI. MCI says Yes.
] * Shareholders say Qwest. MCI says No. Shareholders say
] "lawsuit".
] * Verizon makes a slightly better offer ($23.10/share). MCI
] says Yes.
] * Qwest makes more generous offer ($27.50/share). MCI says
] No. Shareholders say WTF
] * Verizon makes deal to buy 13% stake from prominent
] billionare investor (make the takeover easier). Offers $25.72
] plus an option. MCI says... nothing. Shareholders say WTF.
]
] Why is this significant? This is MCI executives probably
] behaving badly. MCI, the company known as Worldcom. What a
] shock. Here are the forces in motion: MCI shareholders, post
] bankruptcy, are value players who saw a buyout as inevitable
] and lucrative. They are looking for the best price. Qwest
] wants to buy MCI for its customer list -- and needs to have it
] to survive, so it will pay whatever it takes. Verizon sees
] big market assets cheap. MCI execs see themselves without
] jobs if Qwest buys, and sweet offers of something from
] Verizon. So, 20% premium be damned.
]
] I think it was in really bad taste for Verizon to make this
] side offer. They want a voting block (13% is as big as they
] can get before the poison pills) to help the merger. But they
] can't sweet talk an investor out of an equity position -- not
] someone who lost in the debt-equity conversion post-scandal.
] So they had to make a reasonably attractive offer. Not like
] the one for the rest of the company.
]
] It will be fun to watch the justifications for why they have a
] higher price for a non-majority share than the company. Or
] how the MCI people continue to say it is the best deal they
] could get for the company, despite the obvious evidence that
] they are selling it cheaper than the buyer is willing to pay.
] Gross.

an excellent recap and you point all the major flaw points. But what this is really indicative of is the failing of the MCI board to hold true to their fiduciary responsibility. You can say all you want about Sarbannes Oxley and how Congress 'took Wall Street to task' about corporate transparency and trust in the markets - but this flies in the face of all of that. Essentially the MCI board will line their pockets with a Verizon deal (and has conflict of interest written all over it given the players) and will get null from a Qwest deal.

The other big curiousity is how the White House and DC have been completely silent on this. You've got MILLIONS of consumers (ie voters) that will be affected by this (likely with higher prices!) but we'd much rather rail about Terry Schiavo.

crazy.


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