Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Maxis Shares Allocation ...Have you got it?




For those who have applied Maxis IPO, please read the announcement below.......


http://announcements.bursamalaysia.com/EDMS/edmsweb.nsf/ba387758ae37412b482568a300466fb6/16038af7a33e2f654825766b0000fdde/$FILE/PressRelease.pdf


If you are bumiputra and you have applied for the IPO, please do not bother to read the announcement as you will be 100% sure alloted the shares....unless you are so bad luck that you have filled the form wrongly....


For Non Bumi, good luck to you......  hard to get unless you have applied for big lot  i.e more than 10,000 shares, then your chances are 50%......


Do you still believe in "One Malaysia"? Personally, I don't.....


For those who want to buy the shares from open market, please read Dali's article below before you make a next move....

Wednesday, November 11, 2009



Mutterings On Maxis


I tried to evade the question on Maxis, but everyone seems to be keen to find out more on Maxis. During the talk, the Maxis thing came up during Q&A time. Short answer, it will go up, possibly hold above RM6.00-6.50 for the medium term but could stay locked in that range for a long time.



a) Owners are selling 30%, no new shares issued, money going to the pockets of owners. Not necessarily a bad thing, but it goes to show that not much of reinvestment is planned. Not much reinvestment means "not much growth and excitement, and a lot less risk" - but what is Maxis if you are not buying their expertise in running telco operations, why are you paying for people who are turning into just gatekeepers, just maintaining the operations. Getting to be another dividend stock?
 b) Malaysian telcos are trading at a steep premium to their regional peers. Some fund managers have said they will most likely own a smaller portion of Maxis shares in their portfolios than the stock’s actual weightage in the benchmark FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI. Maxis above RM6.00 is already very pricey. However, it is likely to stay above that because the local institutions will be picking up more shares and the cornerstone institutional investors (with the exception of Fidelity) will not be selling as they "need to have sufficient exposure to a critical component of the index - as explained during my talk). So, who will be selling??? .... well, if it goes beyond RM6.50, I think even Ananda and the Saudi owners will sell in the open market.



c) Maxis is this company is a different animal now compared to seven years ago. The market is already saturated with very little room for growth regardless whether in the postpaid, prepaid or wireless broadband segment. So, no growth story, the bulk of the growth trend has been in the past, now its jockeying for market share, and usually that is largely churning and will only result in a lot of work for their respective marketing folks but the revenue will come with very thin margins. Hence, Maxis’ latest sexy offering is of course the exclusive partnership with Apple Inc.’s is a good thing but will need keep getting hits out of the park to really dent the competition.


d) The reason why I am loathed to write about Maxis is that the company made its money from the Malaysian public, and we all have had to endure a lot of "cumbersome technical glitches, capacity issues, dropped calls, etc..." When the going was good, they took it private but obviously knowing that there is likely to be an even better offer to sell Maxis to somebody else, not nice, smart biz but poor form. Now, I don't know for what reason, they choose to relist a likely "dividend counter", with such a pathetic offering to the public. Did Maxis forget who the fuck gave them the revenue and critical mass in the first place. Yes, the Maxis dealers got some, and a very limited number preferred customers did get something... what about the rest, the company was built by selling solely to Malaysians. There was no acknowledgment of that from the offering. The entire offering was passed to institutions and basically Maxis want loyal Malaysians to buy the shares from the institutions in the open market - hey, thanks!

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