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Sam Tibbs contacted Phil Mulacek and sent his sharebuy back excel model info to Phil M about how Sam had modeled a real share back scenario with adjustable amounts of buyback dollars. Sam posted that model on this board awhile ago. Sam is a real CFA . He can use the initials. It was very accretive for shareholders.
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David
The companies strategy for years now is:
1)Split the stock so it trades into the twenties post deal. Maybe a 5 for 1 split STOP THE MANIPULATION.Higher float count.
2)List on the Singapore exchange to let the Asians who will have invested in the Interoil project a chance to own the shares
3)Issue a cash dividend to shareholders with any excess funds.
4)Sam Tibbs model might be a new wrinkle . When I looked at the numbers the sharebuy back was most accretive to present shareholders. Buying back shares is a great idea because those bought back shares can be used to fund with shares the executive option program or said another way to lighten up the dilution of the option program.
Take a look at IOC share counts and you can see two numbera -1) current outstanding shares and 2) fully diluted shares. The stock buy back can cut down or even eliminate that fully diluted number.
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A stock split will not instantaneously affect the float portion or stop the manipulation.
Buying back shares will reduce both share counts, reduce the float, reduce shares available for borrowing, and increase earnings per share (and reduce cash, of course).
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Cash to buy back the split shares would be the same total as the pre-split shares, but I agree a split and the Singapore listing are important. But I think the split is a last step in the process. I would not be surprised that there are limitations on what IOC can do with its capital structure until the SD is done. If we remember the Mitsui JVOA has restrictions on that. For instance, actually issuing debt before any deal could be considered a weakening of the financial position and could affect financing/ FID. That's why the PRE funding is important. There's enough cash to keep the company going until a SD happens.
So ideally it seems that the SD must happen injecting cash and creating value in the monetized asset. That's the first arrow out of the quiver. Then if there is enough up-front cash, a moderate one-time dividend to reward shareholders elevates stock price and fries shorts as they must come up with the dividend in addition to covering their short position. Arrow 2. At that point pps is doing nicely and then is the time to announce a split (at one time someone mentioned a 5-1 would be good at $120; we should be there), and then the listing on the Singapore exchange. Arrows 3 and 4 and the shorts are down and out and IOC shareholders are velly velly happy.