Today, my employer (Bell Canada) was purchased and will be taken
private. Never in a million years did I expect this to happen. Oh well
it just goes to show that no one is immune from this kind of stuff.
On a related note it looks like lots of companies will be taken
private in order to maximize profits for their new owners (public +
private pension funds) while wrestling control away from do-nothing
upper management leaches. This might signal a paradigm shift for
western businesses.
p.s. Shell Oil of Canada was just taken private.
Neil Rieck
Kitchener/Waterloo/Cambridge,
Ontario, Canada.
http://www3.sympatico.ca/n.rieck/
I hope your resumé is up to date! Maximizing profits means cutting
expenses and YOU are an expense! You may get lucky but there WILL be
layoffs!
[I will assume that it is a private equity company that
has bought]
There are some good aspects of this: focus is on value
of company in 3-5 years instead of EPS next quarter.
But the buyers usually do not know anything about the business
and when they sell again they go for the best price - and if
best price is achieved by selling in pieces, then they will do that.
Arne
> I hope your resumé is up to date! Maximizing profits means cutting
> expenses and YOU are an expense! You may get lucky but there WILL be
> layoffs!
I think that profit maximization / cost cutting / layoffs is part
of business no matter whether the company is public or private.
Arne
Was it in 1997 ? I thought it was announced sometime in 1998 and
implementation began in 1999 ?
> Today, my employer (Bell Canada) was purchased and will be taken
> private. Never in a million years did I expect this to happen.
When Sabia took over a few years ago, he seemed to do a good job of
cleaning up the mess left from the .com era. Then, he tried to switch
Bell into those income trust thingy, which the government promptly put a
stop to.
At that point, I started to suspect something was wrong. When companies
start to play financial tricks it is usually because their core
operations aren't doing as well as they lead us to believe.
When Comapq fired Pfeiffer and was not able to find a suitable
replacement, they gave the accountant permanency, but his first task was
to contact M&A bankers to find a buyer for Compaq (since it was clear he
wasn't of calibre to fix it).
Sabia didn't strike me of being of the level of incompetance as
Capellas. So it makes me wonder why, all of a sudden, Bell became open
to takeover offers.
When Videotron (cable company in Quebec that was "family" owned)
realised it didn't have the funds to upgrade its cable plant to support
more TV channels and higher internet speeds, it struct a deal with
Rogers to buy Videotron with garantee of investment to upgrade
facilities. (this deal was scuttled for political reasons).
Perhaps Bell is in the same boat now. It realises it doesn't have the
funds necessary to upgrade its old copper cable plant to fibre to the
homes. Question is whether the new owners will allow such long term
investments.
That is one beauty of taking a company private: no more constant
scrutiny by authorities and that saves a lot of money. (consider
Sarbanes Oxley in the USA which affects public companies).
I have no idea how quickly the new owners would start to make changes
within Bell. Perhaps if their are honest, they will get Bell to stop
advertising services at $20 in large letters when the fine print is in
an unreadable font size and stipulates that the $20 is only for the
first 3 monthsn and there is no mention of the actual price after that.
Neil,
Re: takeovers .. I still remember laughing when someone suggested to me
that Compaq might buy Digital. "Heck, we are worth $10B - who in the
world has that type of money?"
And as they say, the rest is history.
Fwiw, I can almost guarantee that your new organization will be adopting
much more centralized IT strategies that emphasize real cost savings (as
opposed to OS religion cost savings), so it will be interesting to see
how all this shakes out. Imho, those with real DC experience are going
to be in demand.
Having been through 2 takeovers, you can either look at this Bell
acquisition with a view that says the glass is half full or half empty.
There are some things you can influence and some things you can not.
Regards
Kerry Main
Senior Consultant
HP Services Canada
Voice: 613-592-4660
Fax: 613-591-4477
kerryDOTmainAThpDOTcom
(remove the DOT's and AT)
OpenVMS - the secure, multi-site OS that just works.
They also mention that Telus might still jump in with a sweeter offer.
But since it is just holding companies that are buying Bell, I don't
think you will see massive changes. For Sabia to support it, he must
have gotten a very sweet deal and garantee to not be fired for at least
8-12 months.
These equity firms like to buy such companies because they can then use
their cash and borrow against assets to buy more companies. But the
pension fun would have a different mentality since they need constant
reliable revenus to fund retirement plans.
Not sure if they would make radical changes to Bell. Now, if Telus had
bought Bell, we might really benefit since Telus has the software that
allows competitive DSL services without that atrocious hack that is
PPPoE. By removing PPPoE from Bell'S DSL network, it would remove one
major overhead layer that is a pain due to routing and different MTUs.
We were screwed by two things (both under Jean Monty):
1) upper management thought that "convergence" meant we needed to buy
other non-core companies like CTV-GlobeMedia
2) Jean Monty lost 13 billion dollars in two bad investments which
meant were were too deep in debt to lay fiber (we needed to issue
bonds to cover this debt)
Neil
Like the Grolsch commercial on the radio, when your glass is half full
you are looking to the bar tender to top you up :-)
I would have been happy being taken over by Telus. The Ontario
Teachers Pension Fund was my second choice but I was happy to see them
end up with a controlling (52%) interest.
p.s. I just saw this piece on BBC: Virgin Cable (TV) in Britain is is
going to be taken private.
> Re: takeovers .. I still remember laughing when someone suggested to
> me that Compaq might buy Digital. "Heck, we are worth $10B - who in
> the world has that type of money?"
I had similar thoughts, $10B Wow!. Then a week later I saw an item in the
local paper about some Canadian energy company buying out another for $9B
Cdn. Not quite as much but in the same league. These were companies you
have never heard of (and I can't remember either). We think IT is big
business. Peanuts compared to energy.
--
----------------------------------------------------------------
A L B E R T A Alfred Falk fa...@arc.ab.ca
R E S E A R C H Information Systems Dept (780)450-5185
C O U N C I L 250 Karl Clark Road
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
http://www.arc.ab.ca/ T6N 1E4
http://outside.arc.ab.ca/staff/falk/
Yes Virgin Media which was NTL is being bought by a Private Equity
company for 5 billion. Richard Branson apparently wants to retain his
current stake in the new company.
Regards
Andrew
> Neil Rieck
> Kitchener/Waterloo/Cambridge,
> Ontario, Canada.http://www3.sympatico.ca/n.rieck/