Hamstringing U.S. Banks Is Not the Answer [View article]
"...Japanese shareholders have been given a bigger voice in how the banks are run..."
I didn't realize this is version of The Daily Show, and that you are apparently a Jon Stewart impersonator.
Have you ever *been* to Japan? Can you speak Japanese? Have you ever owned a Japanese bank share, and have you ever tried to influence Japanese management by virtue of such ownership?
Do tell us how it turned out.
Big is not beautiful, when big endangers the entire economy through ignorance and greed. There is absolutely a threshold beyond which a bank becomes big enough to be a systemic risk. For some time to come, if a bank crosses that threshold, it's not going to be free to do whatever it wants. One person's "hamstringing" is another person's common sense.
Nikko Cordial: Southeastern Asset Management Won't Sell at 1700 Yen [View article]
What clock would that be? The hedge-fund manager performance-bonus clock? Twenty-nine percent is a far cry from 50 percent.
And they probably won't tender, either, but this is just a noise-making repetition of what they have already said.
Some wag once said that you should never confuse a bull market with brains.
Again, if I was Citi I'd pay the 5 yen per share and walk, and let these fools explain to "their clients" how they fumbled a touchdown on the one-yard-line and then kicked it through the back of the end zone.
Of course Mr. Prince could rescue them, but he also could play it smart and pick up a ton of shares below 1700 simply by pulling the rug out from under these guys who are really overplaying their hands.
Until they get enough shares for sale at 1,900 to block the tender, it's more a display of weakness than anything else.
We went all the way to 1,700 today, but no buyer even one yen higher. Bloomberg got the close wrong; it was 1,695 not 1,697.
A bargaining technique? Don't make me laugh. A bargaining technique would be for the hedgies to put up a BID, not an OFFER that they know isn't going to be hit. Bid 1,725, even, if you think it's worth 1,900. I guarantee you'll get some shares, maybe enough to be more than a minority noisemaker.
BTW, I'd be careful about advising small holders to sit tight. Citi needs only 51 percent, minus its present stake. If they get it, and it looks to me like they will, TSE concentration of ownership rules may make it necessary to delist Nikko. Irony of ironies. Then who are the small holders going to sell to, and at what price?
Nikko Cordial: 6.6% Shareholder Southeastern Says Citi Bid Too Low [View article]
Mason Hawkins might note that Harris et al sold a bunch of their stake, just to "lock in" profits of, course. Why might they do that? And of course what do you think will happen to that stake that they sold? (It gets tendered, naturally.)
Eisai is tendering. Mitsubishi Logistics is tendering.
Maybe Mason would like to, ahem, explain, his valuation metrics?
And put a time frame on his valuation?
I didn't think so.
Have fun with your stubs, Mason, and kiss your bonus down a notch.
But then, you'll tender at the last second, won'tcha, big mouth. ^_-
I don't see you in there bidding, say, even 1725, you pompous smoke generator.
Nikko Cordial: 6.6% Shareholder Southeastern Says Citi Bid Too Low [View article]
CSAM and Harris are playing a busted flush and blowing smoke. If Citi walks from the tender, they both lose perhaps as much as 100 million US$ in potential profit, possibly overnight, and possibly a lot more later. I'm sure they understand this, even though they apparently think that no one else does. They will tender, although they will try to disguise their play up until the moment that they make it.
Sure, Nikko, someday, is probably a 2000 yen stock. But exactly when, and for how long? As we enter the 5th year of the bull in Tokyo, it could also be a 1200 yen stock by, say, August. The hedgies aren't stupid, we have to presume; it seems that they just enjoy sounding that way sometimes.
Nikko Cordial Up 13% on Rumor Citigroup May Boost Stake [View article]
Nikko reaches limit down (1147) at 9:50 am, and stays there, 2:1 order imbalance in the 10 to 12 million share differential range.
At 10:39, Mr. Deep Pockets steps in and bids for the entire offer, and gets it of course. The stock rockets off limit down to reach 1184, but closes the AM session 3 yen off limit down (1150).
Volume ~22 million, with ~16 million of that done on the open or before 10:40.
Fun stock. Fun situation. Guess right, win big. Guess wrong, go home naked.
Nikko Cordial Up 13% on Rumor Citigroup May Boost Stake [View article]
One of the tabloids (not NHK or Nihon Kezai Shimbun) is reporting this morning that Nikko will be delisted. This cannot be confirmed by mainstream journalists as yet, and may in fact be price more of the blatant manipulation that is part of this "modern" market in Tokyo.
Seven minutes before the open, Nikko is being quoted limit down (but so are a lot of others today, and that will change) 1147, about 6.5 million to sell and 3.8 million bid. If it stays that close, the stock will almost surely *not* open limit down.
But it might close there.
Bid is increasing now with 5 minutes to go -- should be unpleasant for speculators who have recently joined the fray, but I would expect an open above limit. Ya never know here, however. ^_^
Nikko Cordial Up 13% on Rumor Citigroup May Boost Stake [View article]
Ah yes. The manipulators are in full force today, what with a somewhat weakish futures market. 12:40 PM here, and Nikko has suddenly resumed its rock-like behavior, trading now at 1271 (-100 roughly) off an order-imbalance up opening.
As I said weeks ago, there is no sense trying to trade this stock. Money management cannot be accomplished under these circumstances. You either believe what you believe and are in ... or out.
The market is beginning to suggest that "out" is the way to go. But the Tokyo market is known for blatant deception.
Before I can even get this off, Nikko is back to 1308, which is only comforting to the people who did not buy yesterday, or this morning.
Nikko Cordial Up 13% on Rumor Citigroup May Boost Stake [View article]
It's also important to note relative valuations here. While Nikko Cordial has recovered a lot but is still about 10 percent off the pre-scandal mark, in the meantime Daiwa and Nomura, not so mention some of the other brokers, have advanced a quick 20 to 30 percent. So the valuation of Nikko has cratered compared to the group.
For the past 4 weeks, buy (any broker other than Nikko) and short an equivalent amount of Nikko on any rise, has not been a bad trade. Yesterday, some of the air in the Securities group escaped. I would not be suprised to see profits taken and a reversal of this type of trade come to the fore.
Nikko Cordial Up 13% on Rumor Citigroup May Boost Stake [View article]
Pre-scandal (12-15-2006) Nikko was cresting 1500 yen. So no, it has *not* recovered fully yet.
Insiders are both manipulating price, and of course acting on information not known by the public, which I suspect would include the likelihood or not of a delisting.
To wit, on Thursday (2-22-2007) at about 1 PM in the afternoon session, a dull Nikko Cordial market (sub 1200 yen) suddenly exploded in 15 or 20 minutes to 1337. In another 15 or 20 minutes, remarkably, it was trading all the way back at 1220, closing the day finally at 1240, and opening lower Friday.
Yesterday, it's up limit on the news, but it doesn't *stay* up limit even one minute. Someone with 5 million shares hits the lock-limit bid of 1411, and after some jostleling just below the limit price, the stock closes the morning session at 1371, a rebound off the morning low, then drifts sideways to lower in the PM session.
There is a lot of speculation going on here of course, but someone with a very large bag of shares is selling into it. Today's action should be very interesting.
Note, the 5 million dumped against a limit-up market yesterday morning at 9:46 could easily have been picked up over the past couple weeks at around 1200. So it's quite possible somone simply wante to pocket 10 million dollars very quickly. But in any market where there is no uptick rule, one has to be very careful when an issue becomes highly speculative.
Interestingly, volume yesterday was essentially equal to Thursday's intraday circus (which had been running low until volatility ran amok in the PM session): about 24 million shares.
Hamstringing U.S. Banks Is Not the Answer [View article]
I didn't realize this is version of The Daily Show, and that you are apparently a Jon Stewart impersonator.
Have you ever *been* to Japan? Can you speak Japanese? Have you ever owned a Japanese bank share, and have you ever tried to influence Japanese management by virtue of such ownership?
Do tell us how it turned out.
Big is not beautiful, when big endangers the entire economy through ignorance and greed. There is absolutely a threshold beyond which a bank becomes big enough to be a systemic risk. For some time to come, if a bank crosses that threshold, it's not going to be free to do whatever it wants. One person's "hamstringing" is another person's common sense.
Nikko Cordial: Southeastern Asset Management Won't Sell at 1700 Yen [View article]
And they probably won't tender, either, but this is just a noise-making repetition of what they have already said.
Some wag once said that you should never confuse a bull market with brains.
Again, if I was Citi I'd pay the 5 yen per share and walk, and let these fools explain to "their clients" how they fumbled a touchdown on the one-yard-line and then kicked it through the back of the end zone.
Of course Mr. Prince could rescue them, but he also could play it smart and pick up a ton of shares below 1700 simply by pulling the rug out from under these guys who are really overplaying their hands.
Nikko Cordial: Shareholders Join Campaign Against Citigroup's Takeover Bid [View article]
We went all the way to 1,700 today, but no buyer even one yen higher. Bloomberg got the close wrong; it was 1,695 not 1,697.
A bargaining technique? Don't make me laugh. A bargaining technique would be for the hedgies to put up a BID, not an OFFER that they know isn't going to be hit. Bid 1,725, even, if you think it's worth 1,900. I guarantee you'll get some shares, maybe enough to be more than a minority noisemaker.
BTW, I'd be careful about advising small holders to sit tight. Citi needs only 51 percent, minus its present stake. If they get it, and it looks to me like they will, TSE concentration of ownership rules may make it necessary to delist Nikko. Irony of ironies. Then who are the small holders going to sell to, and at what price?
Nikko Cordial: 6.6% Shareholder Southeastern Says Citi Bid Too Low [View article]
Eisai is tendering. Mitsubishi Logistics is tendering.
Maybe Mason would like to, ahem, explain, his valuation metrics?
And put a time frame on his valuation?
I didn't think so.
Have fun with your stubs, Mason, and kiss your bonus down a notch.
But then, you'll tender at the last second, won'tcha, big mouth. ^_-
I don't see you in there bidding, say, even 1725, you pompous smoke generator.
Lance
Nikko Cordial: 6.6% Shareholder Southeastern Says Citi Bid Too Low [View article]
Sure, Nikko, someday, is probably a 2000 yen stock. But exactly when, and for how long? As we enter the 5th year of the bull in Tokyo, it could also be a 1200 yen stock by, say, August. The hedgies aren't stupid, we have to presume; it seems that they just enjoy sounding that way sometimes.
Lance
Nikko Cordial Up 13% on Rumor Citigroup May Boost Stake [View article]
Nikko down limit. Nihon Keizai Shimbun (now called "Nikkei") apparently validates Nikko delisting for April.
Try to find a bid. Somewhere. Anywhere. Pink sheets???
Nikko Cordial Up 13% on Rumor Citigroup May Boost Stake [View article]
At 10:39, Mr. Deep Pockets steps in and bids for the entire offer, and gets it of course. The stock rockets off limit down to reach 1184, but closes the AM session 3 yen off limit down (1150).
Volume ~22 million, with ~16 million of that done on the open or before 10:40.
Fun stock. Fun situation. Guess right, win big. Guess wrong, go home naked.
Nikko Cordial Up 13% on Rumor Citigroup May Boost Stake [View article]
Seven minutes before the open, Nikko is being quoted limit down (but so are a lot of others today, and that will change) 1147, about 6.5 million to sell and 3.8 million bid. If it stays that close, the stock will almost surely *not* open limit down.
But it might close there.
Bid is increasing now with 5 minutes to go -- should be unpleasant for speculators who have recently joined the fray, but I would expect an open above limit. Ya never know here, however. ^_^
Nikko Cordial Up 13% on Rumor Citigroup May Boost Stake [View article]
As I said weeks ago, there is no sense trying to trade this stock. Money management cannot be accomplished under these circumstances. You either believe what you believe and are in ... or out.
The market is beginning to suggest that "out" is the way to go. But the Tokyo market is known for blatant deception.
Before I can even get this off, Nikko is back to 1308, which is only comforting to the people who did not buy yesterday, or this morning.
Nikko Cordial Up 13% on Rumor Citigroup May Boost Stake [View article]
For the past 4 weeks, buy (any broker other than Nikko) and short an equivalent amount of Nikko on any rise, has not been a bad trade. Yesterday, some of the air in the Securities group escaped. I would not be suprised to see profits taken and a reversal of this type of trade come to the fore.
Nikko Cordial Up 13% on Rumor Citigroup May Boost Stake [View article]
Insiders are both manipulating price, and of course acting on information not known by the public, which I suspect would include the likelihood or not of a delisting.
To wit, on Thursday (2-22-2007) at about 1 PM in the afternoon session, a dull Nikko Cordial market (sub 1200 yen) suddenly exploded in 15 or 20 minutes to 1337. In another 15 or 20 minutes, remarkably, it was trading all the way back at 1220, closing the day finally at 1240, and opening lower Friday.
Yesterday, it's up limit on the news, but it doesn't *stay* up limit even one minute. Someone with 5 million shares hits the lock-limit bid of 1411, and after some jostleling just below the limit price, the stock closes the morning session at 1371, a rebound off the morning low, then drifts sideways to lower in the PM session.
There is a lot of speculation going on here of course, but someone with a very large bag of shares is selling into it. Today's action should be very interesting.
Note, the 5 million dumped against a limit-up market yesterday morning at 9:46 could easily have been picked up over the past couple weeks at around 1200. So it's quite possible somone simply wante to pocket 10 million dollars very quickly. But in any market where there is no uptick rule, one has to be very careful when an issue becomes highly speculative.
Interestingly, volume yesterday was essentially equal to Thursday's intraday circus (which had been running low until volatility ran amok in the PM session): about 24 million shares.