- 30 Oct 14, 23:34#423145
2014 Monster 26x Bookie Mugger
2015, 2016 WDC: LH44
Just a few snap quotes from grown ups to illustrate what grownups understand to be the scope of possibilities opened up by this well trodden corporate finance deal
From CNBC http://www.cnbc.com/id/102132948
http://www.evo.co.uk/ferrari/14634/ferrari-to-split-with-parent-company-fiat-chrysler
The economist
I cant be bothered with more, if the above doesnt show how puerile and childish it is for someone to declare 'its not this, its that' or 'Fiat wont do this' without even half of a clue how the grownup world works. But like the shareholders are unlikely to value romance over hard cash, we are expected to put up with halfbaked rocking horse poo lest we hurt someones investigative journalistic feelings
next anyone who says algae cant power cars, emit carbon AND extract an even bigger amount all at the same time - must be a naughty troll because they dont allow others to state their uneducated opinions as fact
From CNBC http://www.cnbc.com/id/102132948
Of course, another big car company—like BMW or Volkswagen—could come in and buy the shares or all of Ferrari itself. BMW could use an Italian flag in its sports lineup to better compete against VW's Lamborghini and Bugatti. And some Middle Eastern, Russian or Chinese billionaire could even team up to buy all of Ferrari someday.
http://www.evo.co.uk/ferrari/14634/ferrari-to-split-with-parent-company-fiat-chrysler
What are your thoughts? Could the split help to ensure Ferraris of the future remain focused supercars or will we just see a vast expansion of Ferrari fragrances?...
The economist
But splitting Ferrari apart from FCA makes sense. One is a mass-market carmaker and the other a luxury brand that makes huge profits partly by selling merchandise—around a fifth from selling baseball caps and the like emblazoned with Ferrari’s prancing horse.
Certainly, it’s unimaginable that Ferrari would lose its Italian factory. But an American listing would mean that Ferrari would develop an American shareholder base, even if the Agnellis, who own 32 per cent of FCA through their family holding company, hang on to their Ferrari shares. And American shareholders, probably more so than shareholders from other countries, might demand ever-rising quarterly earnings, meaning shareholder returns might take precedent over the performance, quality and exclusiveness of the product itself (Ferrari limits production to about 7,000 sports cars a year, carefully maintaining a two-year waiting list).
The way I read it..... FCA own 90% and it states "A total of 10 per cent of FCA's interest in Ferrari will be offered to public investors. The remainder will be distributed among FCA shareholders" In which case it's given up 90% of Ferrai's shares. Therefore going forward anyone company can start buying up shares until they get to 51%, just like pension companies were buying up post office shares from indivduals. I may have read it wrong but at the end of the day 90% of Ferrari shares will be floating around.
Pierre Lassonde, chairman of Toronto gold royalty company Franco-Nevada and an avid owner of Ferraris – his latest is the Ferrari 458 Italia, red of course – does not necessarily think a U.S. stock market listing will damage the company’s brand. He thinks Ferrari has been doing that all by itself through losses on the Formula One circuit. “The product image is really, really tied to the success of the F1 races,” he said. “But they’re not winning races.”
So 10% of Ferrari is still owned by Ferrari Blood. 10% will be issued for public sale which is bound to raise a an over-inflated amount of funds for that small 10% (every rich Ferrari Fan will want a piece). Then the remaining 80% will be distributed between a selective number of shareholders within in FIAT. So if the 80% want to sell to public or sell back to ferrari or even VW that's where the infighting begins. I'd assume son of Ferrari would probably have first refusal on the shares. This could be disastrous for Ferrari or very lucrative for BMW Ferrari?! Maserati is now a FIAT ambition and Alfa isn't really worth mentioning as last time Alfa were really related... Enzo Ferrari was a youthful man.
I cant be bothered with more, if the above doesnt show how puerile and childish it is for someone to declare 'its not this, its that' or 'Fiat wont do this' without even half of a clue how the grownup world works. But like the shareholders are unlikely to value romance over hard cash, we are expected to put up with halfbaked rocking horse poo lest we hurt someones investigative journalistic feelings
next anyone who says algae cant power cars, emit carbon AND extract an even bigger amount all at the same time - must be a naughty troll because they dont allow others to state their uneducated opinions as fact

2014 Monster 26x Bookie Mugger
2015, 2016 WDC: LH44