RE: How much is CEG really worth today?1 Aug 2021 10:33
Thank you Starchild - a good read.
Just a couple of points I'm putting across for others to think about:
1. Does CEG still have $10m sat in the bank as at today? It's been 2 months since they gave us that figure. Would be interesting to know what their cash balance is now and what they used to pay for company cost and S2 costs.
Is that $10m to Stena finalised? If paid in shares, yes the company will hold that cash but be prepared to see some serious dilution because of it.
2. Agree with PoO.
3. Not sure where the idea of a takeover is coming from? Speculative? In which case the market is going to ignore.
4. Add cash? Where from?
5. Tax credits can't really be used as an current asset as an action is required for this to be crystallised. It's like having a safe full of gold bars and you don't have access to the key (yet or ever will).
6. Percentage to use?
7. Agree that it is worth "something" but with the lack of news recently, I doubt unless CEG gives an RNS saying they plan to do something with it (which I doubt will be in the next 1 or 2 years as CEO openly said Bahamas only play a small part in the portfolio and they don't have the cash to do so). The market is going to continue to give this a 0 value.
8. Same as point 3, not sure where this idea comes from.
9. True but I'm not even going to think about what this will do to the SP.
10. Did it succeed? Only 38% of shareholders took the deal. The rest were sold to institutional investors. I think the 38% is the key figure to walk away with. That only slightly over a third of the investors thought this was a "discount".
Conclusion: I agree that if S2 succeeds, then CEG is undervalued. I disagree that the SP will soar because this is only one well and is not enough to turn the company around. It will increase but not soar.
If they continue to drill wells (S3, S4, S5) and they all succeed AND an annual report is released showing CEG can stand on it's own two feet then the SP will soar.
If S2 fails I argue that the company is over valued i.e SP will continue to fall. They will be carrying a lot of debt (especially if they signed the Arena agreement which I will be annoyed at BOD if they don't release an RNS tomorrow to confirm whether they have signed it or extended it or in talks with someone else), have expenses to cover on a daily basis and the only thing they have in their pipeline is the Suriname field which CEO already said is a smaller version of the Saffron fields.
I think talking on behalf of typical investors, after the P1 fail, if S2 also fails, no one will even bat an eyelid at Suriname.
On that note, I'm still in but this is a very high risk play.
GLA