Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Sybase, Inc. (NYSE: SY) shares rose marginally after the software-maker agreed to to boost its share buyback program as part of an agreement with one of its largest shareholders. The firm announced a $300 million self-tender offer at prices between $28 and $30 per share and will use its best efforts to complete approximately $82.9 million in additional open market repurchases prior to the completion of their 2009 annual meeting. The shareholder, Sandell Asset Management, will in turn drop its bid to takeover the board and limit its future acquisition of stock. So, should you ad some Sybase to your stock portfolio?

Sandell Asset Management had been concerned about the company’s large cash position. Sybase noted that it had about $735 million in worldwide cash, with between $225 million and $250 million of free cash. However, restricted cash and long-term investments reduce this amount to around $700 million in available cash balance. Looking ahead, the company estimated that it would need working capital in the United States of about $85 million and $115 million outside of the United States. Clearly, this is excess cash that could be leveraged elsewhere to deliver value for shareholders rather than sit in a bank account.

So, is this buyback a good deal for shareholders? The current agreement calls for purchasing at a significant premium to the current market price. The premium currently stands at around 9.5 percent and could rise higher, since the additional $82.9 million buyback is not tied to a specific price. There are also many other benefits brought on by a share buyback program given that it will reduce the number of outstanding shares by over 10 percent. Since it was financed out of cash on hand and not earnings, the reduction should boost the earnings per share. Some of this may be priced into the stock, but it is still a benefit worth mentioning.

Sybase is also quickly turning itself around after being left for dead not long ago. The software-maker announced record earnings in 2007 with a 17 percent increase in revenues and 26 percent increase in net income, which indicates that it has been improving its profit margins. Meanwhile, the company is continuing to take a larger portion of the database market from competitors like Sun Microsystems who had the opportunity to acquire the company on the cheap not long ago! In the end, these factors all make SY a stock worth watching closely over the next few months!

Related Companies
Microsoft Corporation (MSFT)
International Business Machines Corp. (IBM)
Oracle Corporation (ORCL)
Symantec Corporation (ORCL)
CA, Inc. (CA)
Progress Software Corporation (PRGS)
Novell, Inc. (NOVL)
Pervasive Software Inc. (PVSW)
BMC Software, Inc. (BMC)
Sun Microsystems Inc. (JAVA)

2/26/2008 6:44:05 PM UTC  #    Comments [1]  |  Trackback
2/29/2008 6:29:58 AM UTC
Cool, the post.

Thanks for the information.
Name
E-mail
Home page

Comment (HTML not allowed)  

Enter the code shown (prevents robots):