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    « Waiting For Godot | Main | Lies, Damned Lies & The Truth Of AIM's Statistics: Results H1 2007 »

    June 19, 2007

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    REG CROWDER

    Apropos of "Planning to Stay on the Shelf..." it would seem that what I shall call "American shelf IPO disease" has spread to the entire US corporate economy.

    I commend to all of the followers of AIM4TECH, for two reasons, a story by Michael J. de la Merced in The New York Times dated Sunday, July 15, 2007 (today as I write this) -- under the headline: "An I.P.O. Glut Just Waiting to Happen."

    The main premise is that when the recent glut of going-private events are ready to be brought back to the market as going-public events, the sheer volume will crash share prices. Thus, we have one more reason to forget about doing an IPO in New York. (Apparently, nobody wants to talk about the fact that the US earnings-per-share growth figures for the first and second quarters in the US are fake. They reflect the use of huge amounts of debt to reduce the NUMBER of shares. Adjusted for buybacks, actual EPS has been deteriorating for two quarters. And leverage ratios are "going to hell in handbasket." But that's an argument for another day.)

    You have to register with The New York Times to read its stories but registration is free. With any luck, the link below will take you to the story:

    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/15/business/yourmoney/15deal.html?ex=1185163200&en=433ea80454b85bb7&ei=5070&emc=eta1

    BUSINESS / YOUR MONEY | July 15, 2007
    An I.P.O. Glut Just Waiting to Happen
    By MICHAEL J. de la MERCED
    A flood of public companies have gone private over the last two years. What happens when they go public — again?

    **********************************

    If you don't have time for the whole story, let me share with you the delightfully entertaining part in which the US equity markets are described as "a casino."

    "Before, I.P.O.'s were kind of the only game in town," said Robert A. Profusek, the head of the mergers-and-acquisitions practice at Jones Day, the law firm. "Today, it's more like a casino in terms of the number of games available."

    ******************************

    Wishing everyone a one-day-late Happy Bastille Day:

    I remain your not-particularly-humble servant,

    -- REG CROWDER

    www.MediaBistro.com/RegCrowder

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