Outlook: Electra/3i
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Your support makes all the difference.IF there is one thing that can be safely predicted about 3i's bid for the rival venture capital trust Electra, it is that the outcome will be very close. With the proxies now flowing ahead of Thursday's EGM, advisers are preparing themselves for a rerun of the CalEnergy bid for Northern Electric, which was decided by a mere 2000 votes. Since 3i has made its offer conditional on Electra shareholders rejecting their management's alternative restructuring programme, the EGM will in effect decide the outcome of the bid.
Brian Larcombe, the 3i chief executive, has adopted a very high-risk strategy for 3i by refusing to come up with the knockout bid the market wanted to see. If he pulls it off, he will look very clever. But Electra shareholders should think long and hard before accepting his mix of cash and 3i shares.
Until the Inland Revenue holed Electra's defence earlier this week by ruling that the taxman was entitled to a share of Electra's planned pounds 544m buyback, Michael Stoddard and his team seemed to have the better of the play.
Electra's shareholders would plainly have been best served if they had been offered a similar reconstruction plan at a much earlier stage. As it is, it had to be coaxed out of Mr Stoddard, under threat of a hostile bid. Even so, he has demonstrated considerable value locked up in Electra's portfolio of unquoted investments, and the scheme Electra is putting in place gives management all the incentive it needs to realise that value within a realistic timeframe.
Shareholders who reject bids and put their faith in promises from management to do better are frequently disappointed. But in this case, shareholders ought to vote yes to Electra's defence and say no to 3i.
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