Was planning buying in Friday but got tied up at work. Been watching the shareprice go up ever since.........
Printable View
Was planning buying in Friday but got tied up at work. Been watching the shareprice go up ever since.........
Well done Belgie. I wish I had some spare cash to top up but am very well positioned with HNZ having bought in heavily a long time ago. I agree with your other post and I see no reason why this share will stop at 90c. I believe we will see it closer to $1 withing not too long a time frame (late 2014).
Those buying in now or those of us having bought much cheaper than current prices have and will enjoy strong growth for some time yet, which will then be followed by nice steady flow of fully imputed dividends. I am very content with HNZ being the biggest in my portfolio, not so happy currnetly with my 2nd biggest DIL :eek2:
Anyone get a low ball offer? What did it say and are Washington Securities high?
http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/indu...ow-ball-target
Sell my shares that have risen by 60% in a year for the price I bought them for? Yes please!
Do they think we are idiots?
These sort of low-ball offers come from "bottom-feeders" and are aimed at "widows and orphans" who may be unsophisticated when it comes to financial affairs. Most companies who become aware that their registries are being mined for addresses, send a letter to shareholders warning them about the possibility that an offer may be made for their shares at well below market price.
Oh right Bjauck. I was wondering how they frame the case for buying the shares. Do they just lie about the share price? Or do they tell you that the company is about to go under or in dire financial trouble or something?
I've received offers of this kind for other companies that I hold. They're usually quite formally worded and would look pretty convincing to the uninitiated.
They usually emphasise the no commission offer which would appeal to some smaller holders - but the offer price is always way below market. Even though they do have to quote the current market price it's usually in another part of the document - well away from their low-ball offer.
The payment terms are usually unattractive too - often some time after the transfer is effected so the seller is left as an unsecured creditor in the event that the dosh doesn't arrive.
I always send the offer forms back with a suitably worded inscription such as "crap" or ****ers" - and always in in an unstamped envelope - my little protest at their thieving ways.
Cool, thanks guys, just wondering what these things looked like, how they made the case for getting you to get rid of your shares for peanuts. Nice one Pierre for giving them some harsh words!
Here's some positive news for Heartland in comparison to other NZ Banks , cut from the Herald this AM.
New Zealand banks boosted their combined profit to almost $1 billion in the March quarter, but an ultra-competitive lending environment appears to be favouring big players, like ANZ, over smaller operators such as TSB and Kiwibank, according to new research.
and it goes on to say.........
Five of the nine banks surveyed - ANZ, Westpac, ASB, BNZ and Heartland Bank - enjoyed a rise in profit in the March quarter.
The Co-operative Bank had flat profit, while TSB, SBS Bank (formerly Southland Building Society) and Kiwibank all saw decreases in their bottom-line, according to the survey.
So Heartland seem to be doing well and other Kiwi owned banks less so.
And I thought this comment from the Stuff website on the same issue, was very interesting:
" Net interest margins, which represent the premium added to money before it is lent, fell 4 basis points to 2.24 per cent.
Cheapest by far were Kiwibank (1.78 per cent margin) and TSB Bank (1.98 per cent), while the newest bank, Heartland, occupied the other extreme at 4.21 per cent.
The big four Australian-owned banks all had margins ranging between 2.15 and 2.35 per cent. "
I prefer to watch FPF and UBC as indicators, rather than the banks to get a fix where Heartland is going.
I feel it is more a finance company with a bank licence, than a bank that does finance company business.
However, we do have the safeguard of it having to comply with Reserve Bank banking regulations.