This is not necessarily the case. The market decides the "right" price for a share at any point in time. Initially the market drove the price up. Thereafter it decided that it was worth less. This has no bearing on the IPO price.ronan_d_john said:The fact that the eircom share price dipped below the flotation price and stayed there, I indicated was due to an overpriced flotation.
ClubMan said:This is not necessarily the case. The market decides the "right" price for a share at any point in time.
Murt10 said:Eircom was floated with a greenshoe option. This means that the people floating the company could buy or sell shares in the company that they had held back for a specified period after the float and were therfore legally allowed to manipulating the price.
You are ignoring the fact that the markets are dynamic so circumstantial changes, such as IT/telecoms stocks in general going out of favour with investors, are also relevant here and could just as easily be the cause of lower share prices in the post IPO period.ronan_d_john said:Therefore, either the value of the company is overestimated causing the higher flotation price (which is unlikely unlikely in eircoms situation) or the capital requirements of the owners, i.e. the Government caused the higher flotation price.
ronan_d_john said:You make a greenshoe option in an IPO sound like it's something shady and underhanded. Please explain how a greenshoe is, in your opinion a form of price manipulation.
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ronan_d_john said:There is research in Germany, if my memory serves me correctly, which actually states that the use of a Greenshoe option is actually designed to support overpriced IPOs in some situations. .
'forced to sell' is being melodramatic. Over 80% of shareholders accepted the offer price. The only people 'forced' to sell against there will were the minority who rejected the offer. These are the standard takeover rules, and if you don't like the rules, you shouldn't be in the market.shnaek said:Then we were forced to sell so certain big business people and staff could make a killing.
RainyDay said:'forced to sell' is being melodramatic. Over 80% of shareholders accepted the offer price. The only people 'forced' to sell against there will were the minority who rejected the offer. These are the standard takeover rules, and if you don't like the rules, you shouldn't be in the market.
As RainyDay says, under the normal takeover rules that apply to all public companies, a majority of shareholders agreed to the takeover so those who did not were the only ones forced to sell. I can't see any legitimate complaint about this.shnaek said:I had a good which I wished to keep, but I was unable to do so, due to the 'rules' of which you speak. Therefore I was 'forced' to sell. I may have been in the minority, but I feel that many of the small shareholders (the public) would have preferred hold on to their shares if given a yes or no choice.
I don't see how this follows, especially in the context of the eircom sell off?I now have the experience to know never to trust an Irish government floatation.
thus the interests of the unions will take precedent over that of the public
Over 80% of shareholders accepted the offer price.
Sherman said:Surely giving the workers/unions a significant shareholding is precisely the way to ensure that their interests and those of the shareholding public become more closely aligned?
Well, if you consider that the workers/unions are the only people to make any consistent money out of the eircom flotation while the actual service provided by eircom to the shareholding public, and the public at large, has consistently suffered since the flotation, it pretty much puts a hole in your arguement
icantbelieve said:Right, so eircom as a company still exists because its well run rather than the fact that we're a more electricity dependent society and they have a major headstart on any competition due to their years of being a monopoly.
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