Going from public to private

A few of these have hit the headlines recently in a relatively short time period:

Genworth MI (TSX: MIC) having their 43% minority interest held by the public acquired by the majority holder Brookfield; this can generally be attributed to a relatively inexpensive valuation if it passes.

Dorel (TSX: DII.A/DII.B) is going private, lead by the managing family. An investor in the COVID-19 bottom would have made an astounding 10x their investment, although at that time it should also be pointed out that their financial position was already quite leveraged (principle: the more dangerous they look, the cheaper they are).

Rocky Mountain Dealerships (TSX: RME) in a management-sponsored takeover of the company with a capital management firm. In general, I’d consider the $7/share offered in relation to the rest of the firm to be a fairly cheap acquisition.

Clearwater Seafoods (TSX: CLR), while not strictly going private, will effectively operate as such under Premium Brands (TSX: PBH) holding half the ownership while the Mi’kMaq First Nations will control the other half of the company. My assumption is the (relatively high) valuation paid has strategic value in light of the First Nations’ fishing rights – squeeze out the competition.

The last three are companies that are generally off the radar of most institutional investors. Makes you wonder if others are brewing – if your obscure company doesn’t get much love from the financial marketplace, why bother staying listed?

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Makes me wonder about AFN …

I wonder if the RME deal goes through. It was definitely an opportunistic buyout by management. And when you look at how other equipment stocks have traded up in line or higher with RME the last month, the takeover “premium” is probably a negative.