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13-06-2016, 09:26 PM
#7741
Member
Originally Posted by rocketship
Well Acasta Limited thinks so too. Just received an unsolicited offer by them to buy all my shares at $1.40! The catch is, they will pay it in 10 instalments over 10 years (simply 10% every year until its paid), I'll of course lose the right to any dividends over this period, as I no longer own the shares and by the way there is something called inflation that I 'should' consider also.
Anyone else received this once in a lifetime offer?!
I don't understand - why would anyone accept such an offer? I mean, I guess they're targetting people who aren't that well-informed, but even so, it's not like a quick cash offer or anything that would tempt someone who's desperate.
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13-06-2016, 09:30 PM
#7742
Originally Posted by Cricketfan
I don't understand - why would anyone accept such an offer? I mean, I guess they're targetting people who aren't that well-informed, but even so, it's not like a quick cash offer or anything that would tempt someone who's desperate.
They're preying on the naive and ill informed (read gullible) small shareholder. Throw it in the bin.
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13-06-2016, 09:30 PM
#7743
Originally Posted by rocketship
Well Acasta Limited thinks so too. Just received an unsolicited offer by them to buy all my shares at $1.40! The catch is, they will pay it in 10 instalments over 10 years (simply 10% every year until its paid), I'll of course lose the right to any dividends over this period, as I no longer own the shares and by the way there is something called inflation that I 'should' consider also.
Anyone else received this once in a lifetime offer?!
This has already been quite well mentioned/discussed on the forum, I believe someone worked it out to be $1.07 in "today's" prices... they are hoping several hundred uninformed heartland shareholders who may only hold a couple hundred or couple thousand shares will sell and thing "gee I thought they were 90 cents, $1.40 sounds great!!!" Not sure how many small shareholders will fall for it, especially with the 10 year installments and the fact you won't get any dividends... and we're at $1.40 right now! (if you include next 2 dividend payment estimates which I think will amount to around 9 cents)
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13-06-2016, 09:36 PM
#7744
Member
Ah but what a cunning plan! We give them our shares and they pay you back with the dividends you would have received.
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13-06-2016, 09:43 PM
#7745
Member
Originally Posted by trader_jackson
they are hoping several hundred uninformed heartland shareholders who may only hold a couple hundred or couple thousand shares will sell and thing "gee I thought they were 90 cents, $1.40 sounds great!!!"
I know there are some realllly stupid and gullible people around, but surely even the most gullible person would check the current market price before selling anything? The only thing I can think of is that they're hoping people will miss the 10-year thing - I didn't receive the offer, was it in small print or something?
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13-06-2016, 10:53 PM
#7746
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14-06-2016, 04:37 AM
#7747
Originally Posted by rocketship
Well Acasta Limited thinks so too. Just received an unsolicited offer by them to buy all my shares at $1.40! The catch is, they will pay it in 10 instalments over 10 years (simply 10% every year until its paid), I'll of course lose the right to any dividends over this period, as I no longer own the shares and by the way there is something called inflation that I 'should' consider also.
Anyone else received this once in a lifetime offer?!
I like the idea that was thrown around last time there was a low ball offer like this - everybody takes the postage paid envelope and fills it with newspaper, completely unrelated paperwork or pictures of cats etc and sends it back. That way they end up with a very large postage bill and a lot of time wasted sorting these letters, hopefully convincing them not to bother doing it again. Or better yet, fill the form out with completely wrong details sending them on a completely unproductive wild goose chase.
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14-06-2016, 06:43 AM
#7748
Originally Posted by nextbigthing
I like the idea that was thrown around last time there was a low ball offer like this - everybody takes the postage paid envelope and fills it with newspaper, completely unrelated paperwork or pictures of cats etc and sends it back. That way they end up with a very large postage bill and a lot of time wasted sorting these letters, hopefully convincing them not to bother doing it again. Or better yet, fill the form out with completely wrong details sending them on a completely unproductive wild goose chase.
Agree on that strategy NB. Sadly there are some SH that fall for these scams and these guys have been making millions by running them. It is a shame it can not be stopped somehow but so fa publicly shaming them and responding to them with rubbish to increase their work and costs, is all we can do.
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17-06-2016, 02:24 PM
#7749
Member
Hi guys, is anyone an interest.co.nz member and has access to this subscriber-only article they could share on the web somehow? Thanks!
http://www.interest.co.nz/business/8...d-says-reverse
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17-06-2016, 02:37 PM
#7750
Member
Originally Posted by iceman
Agree on that strategy NB. Sadly there are some SH that fall for these scams and these guys have been making millions by running them. It is a shame it can not be stopped somehow but so fa publicly shaming them and responding to them with rubbish to increase their work and costs, is all we can do.
I got the offer letter the other day. The information is clearly stated in the letter, so it doesn't seem like a scam. I honestly don't know why anyone would accept the offer though, it clearly states the difference between the offer price and market price (at time of printing), and the fact that it will be paid over 10 years. It's a cheeky offer, but there's nothing deceptive about it. Possibly it's a very basic intelligence test, and those that accept it fail?
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