In this briefing:
- Delta Thailand’s Tender Offer: Updated Timetable
- Glovis/Mobis Pair Trade: Glovis Being Overpriced Relative to Mobis on Unsubstantiated Speculation
- StubWorld: Can One’s Offer For Kian Joo Can; Mahindra At Possible Set-Up Levels
- Korean Stubs Spotlight: Close the Pair Trade Between BGF Co. & BGF Retail
1. Delta Thailand’s Tender Offer: Updated Timetable
With Form 247-3 (Intention to Make a Tender Offer) and the FY18 dividend (Bt2.30/share) for Delta Electronics Thai (DELTA TB) having been announced, this insight briefly provides an updated indicative timetable for investors.
The next key date is the submission of Form 247-4, the Tender Offer for Securities, which will provide full details of the Offer.
Date | Data in the Date | Comment |
1-Aug-18 | Announcement | |
13-Jan-19 | Pre-approvals fulfilled | |
18-Feb-19 | Form 247-3 submitted | |
18-Feb-19 | FY18 dividend announced | |
22-Feb-19 | Form 247-4 to be submitted | As per announcement |
25-Feb-19 | Tender Offer open | Assume 1 business day after 247-4 is submitted |
28-Feb-19 | Last day to buy to be on the 4 Mar register | T+2 settlement |
1-Mar-19 | Ex-date for dividend | As announced |
4-Mar-19 | Date to be on the registry to receive full-year dividend | As announced |
22-Mar-19 | Last day for revocation of shares | 20th day of Tender Offer1 |
29-Mar-19 | Close of Offer | Assuming 25 business days tender period |
2-Apr-19 | AGM | As announced |
3-Apr-19 | Consideration paid under the Offer | Assume 3 business days after close of Offer |
11-Apr-19 | Payment of FY18 dividend | As announced2 |
1 assuming the shareholder has not forfeited the right to revoke
2 the dividend is subject to a 10% WHT for non-residents.
This above indicative timetable assumes a conditional offer based on a minimum acceptance level of at least 50%. Payment under the offer may indeed be earlier, as explained below, which also ties in with a shareholders’ right to revoke shares tendered.
In addition, investors should not tender once the offer opens – assuming the tender period commences on the 25 February – but wait until their shares are on the registry as at 4 March to receive the FY18 dividend.
Currently trading at a 2.2%/22% gross/annualised spread. Bear in mind the dividend is subject to 10% tax.
2. Glovis/Mobis Pair Trade: Glovis Being Overpriced Relative to Mobis on Unsubstantiated Speculation

- There are still two schools of thought on the HMG restructuring. Glovis/Mobis merged entity as a holdco is the one. Only Glovis as a holdco with Mobis→HM→Kia below is the other. Since late 3Q last year, the local street started speculating on the latter.
- This has pushed up Glovis price relative to Mobis. They are now near 200% of σ in favor of Glovis on a 20D MA. Glovis made a 2+σ jump upwardly just in 4 trading days. On a 120D horizon, they are almost at the 120D high.
- At this point, neither is a hassle free way. In the latter, Glovis has to come up with nearly ₩2tril to buy Kia’s Mobis stake, highly likely through new debts. This financial burden wouldn’t be light on Glovis. Glovis may also be facing a risk of forceful holdco conversion. This will create a serious headache with Kia as a grand grand son subsidiary.
- The current speculation pushing up Glovis relative to Mobis has yet to be sufficiently substantiated/justified. This suggests Glovis is being overbought on a speculation that will very likely be short-lived. I expect there will soon be a mean reversion for Mobis. I’d go long Mobis and short Glovis at this point.
3. StubWorld: Can One’s Offer For Kian Joo Can; Mahindra At Possible Set-Up Levels

This week in StubWorld …
- Can One Bhd (CAN MK)‘s gets shareholder approval to launch a Mandatory General Offer for 33%-held Kian Joo Can Factory (KJC MK). (note, both legs are illiquid)
- Curtis Lehnert sees Mahindra & Mahindra (MM IN)‘s discount to NAV at its widest since 2015.
Preceding my comments on Can One/Kian Joo, Mahindra and other stubs are the weekly setup/unwind tables for Asia-Pacific Holdcos.
These relationships trade with a minimum liquidity threshold of US$1mn on a 90-day moving average, and a % market capitalisation threshold – the $ value of the holding/opco held, over the parent’s market capitalisation, expressed in percent – of at least 20%.
4. Korean Stubs Spotlight: Close the Pair Trade Between BGF Co. & BGF Retail
On January 8th, 2019, we wrote a report on initiating a pair trade of going long BGF Co Ltd (027410 KS) and going short Bgf Retail (282330 KS). (Korean Stubs Spotlight: A Pair Trade Between BGF Co. & BGF Retail) This trade has worked out well and now we think this is a good time to close this trade.
The return on this pair trade was 7.5%. (This assumes no commission costs, pricing spreads, taxes, or borrowing cost) using closing share price as of January 8th to February 19th, 2019. This trade was made over a period of 42 days so the annualized returns would be nearly 65%.
It appears that many traders and investors agreed that BGF was excessively undervalued versus BGF Retail early in 2019. Among the factors cited above, the excessive NAV discount to its intrinsic value as well as the market’s overt concerns about the size of the tender offer between BGF and BGF Retail in 2018 appear to be the key factors that drove the share prices of these two firms diverging excessively in 2H 2018 but then converging back to their norms so far in 2019.
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