Satyam Computer SERVICES LTD.
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27.01.2009 17:50
Satyam Appoints Goldman Sachs and Avendus as Investment Bankers
HYDERABAD, India, Jan. 27 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Satyam Computer Services Limited (News) today announced that its board of directors has appointed Goldman Sachs (News) and Avendus as investment bankers. The firms will help the board explore several strategic options, including identification of strategic investors; obtaining expressions of interest; and ensuring a fair and transparent approach to the process.
The board also appointed Boston Consulting Group (BCG) as management advisors. Three senior BCG representatives will work closely with Satyam's board and leadership team to spearhead the organization's reemergence. "It is important to note that BCG will not charge a fee for their services. This reflects their commitment to the task at hand," said Satyam Board Member Deepak Parekh.
Additionally, the board:
-- Concluded most discussions about Satyam's financing requirements, and will wrap up negotiations with banks in the coming days. As a result, immediate operational expenses will be managed.
-- Reaffirmed that January salaries will be paid as scheduled and from internal accruals and receivables.
-- Further validated Satyam's headcount. Sufficient data now exists to show that numbers reported earlier are accurate.
-- Discussed Satyam's future management structure, and will issue a statement on this matter this week.
"The board has received several proposals from corporate entities and from private equity firms," said Board Member T.N. Manoharan. "Some are interested in evaluating Satyam as an integrated entity, while others have expressed interest in portions of Satyam's business. However, selling 'parts' of Satyam would be contrary to the Indian government's mandate regulating the company's affairs as a going concern. Therefore, we are not currently considering that option."
Manoharan was circumspect regarding a recent move by a corporate entity to acquire large portions of Satyam shares.
"The reasons for that move would be best explained by the buyer," he said. "At this stage, it should not be taken as an indication of support by the government-nominated board for a change of control at Satyam. The board has received an adequate number of bidding interests. As such, in consultation with SEBI and the Indian government, it will devise appropriate, fair and transparent measures to enable open bids. It is important to remember that Satyam is a government-administered company, reporting to the Company Law Board and the Ministry of Corporate Affairs."
In the meanwhile, Satyam leaders and the board continue to reach out to customers to ensure business continuity.
"I speak with quite a few customers and partners every day, and it is heartening to note that they continue to engage with us, confidently," said Board Member Kiran Karnik. "While a few are discussing risk mitigation plans, most are monitoring our performance closely and want to see Satyam return to long-term sustainability.
"Additionally, we have been reassured by several key customers who have sent strong messages to other service providers asking them to refrain from poaching Satyam's associates or business. We have also seen a steady improvement in statement of work extensions."
Manoharan said these actions reflect Satyam's determination to restore stakeholder confidence, ensure stability and growth, and "bring back the glory Satyamites truly deserve."
Tuesday's was the fourth meeting of its new board of directors since Jan. 10 (it also convened for more than three hours yesterday) and was chaired by Mr. Manoharan. Its next meeting will be Feb. 5.
About Satyam
Satyam , a leading global business and information technology services company, delivers consulting, systems integration, and outsourcing solutions to clients in numerous industries across the globe. Satyam leverages deep industry and functional expertise, leading technology practices, and an advanced, global delivery model to help clients transform their highest-value business processes and improve their business performance. The company's professionals excel in engineering and product development, supply chain management, client relationship management, business process quality, business intelligence, enterprise integration, and infrastructure management, among other key capabilities.
Satyam development and delivery centers in the US, Canada, Brazil, the UK, Hungary, Egypt, UAE, India, China, Malaysia, Singapore, and Australia serve clients, including Fortune 500. For more information, see http://www.satyam.com/.
Safe Harbor
This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of section 27A of Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. The forward-looking statements contained herein are subject to certain risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those reflected in the forward-looking statements. Satyam undertakes no duty to update any forward-looking statements. For a discussion of the risks associated with our business, please see the discussions under the heading "Risk Factors" in our report on Form 6-K concerning the quarter ended September 30, 2008, furnished to the Securities and Exchange Commission on November 7, 2008, and the other reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission from time to time. These filings are available at http://www.sec.gov/
28.01.2009 11:02
Satyam shares rise for 8th day as bidders circle
NEW DELHI, Jan 28 (Reuters) - Shares in Satyam Computer Services (News) rallied as much as 18 percent on Wednesday, extending gains to an eighth session, after the fraud-hit outsourcer's new board said there had been wide bidding interest and a transparent process would be devised.
Boston Consulting Group, which was appointed on Tuesday as management adviser in the revival process, sees Satyam as a quality company with a viable business, one of its India directors told Reuters on Wednesday.
'You have to understand that the quality and capability of this company ... just because a few people did some fraud and created an issue on the balance sheet does not mean that this company is not a very high-quality company,' said James Abraham, a director and partner at BCG's Indian unit.
Satyam, India's No. 4 software exporter, was plunged into a crisis after its founder Ramalinga Raju resigned as chairman earlier this month, revealing profits had been falsified for years and $1 billion of cash on the books did not exist.
The government stepped in to limit the damage from India's biggest corporate fraud and appointed a new six-member board, which has been meeting on a weekly basis.
On Tuesday, it appointed Goldman Sachs and Avendus, an Indian investment bank, to identify strategic investors and obtain expressions of interest.
Engineering conglomerate Larsen&Toubro, which also runs a small software firm, has trebled its stake in Satyam to 12 percent and its chairman said on Tuesday it would not be averse to raise it further to 15 percent.
Under Indian law, this would trigger an open offer for a further 20 percent.
'The market is expecting some kind of an open offer,' said Gajendra Nagpal, CEO at Unicon Financial. 'And some confidence has been restored with hopes that shares are going to a credible hand like L&T.'
The open offer is usually based on the average price over the last six months or some 335 rupees, according to Thomson Reuters data, but Nagpal said there was a possibility the market regulator could relax rules as Satyam shares had plunged.
'We are hoping that it won't be less than 90 rupees. So it's a punter's call to make some quick money,' Nagpal said.
Satyam shares were trading 17.9 percent up at 55.60 rupees at 0839 GMT, after touching a high of 55.75 rupees, which was their highest since Jan. 7, the day Raju revealed the fraud and resigned.
T.N. Manoharan, a member of Satyam's new board, said on Tuesday it had received several proposals from companies as well as buyout firms and would devise 'appropriate, fair and transparent measures' for enbling open bids.
U.S.-based outsourcer iGate has said it would be interested in buying Satyam with PE help.
Satyam's board members have said they were arranging funds from banks and financial institutions, including state-run Life Insurance Corp that owns about 4.3 percent of Satyam.
The board said on Tuesday January salaries would be paid as scheduled from internal accruals and receivables. The proposed management structure would be released this week, the board said.
(Reporting by Devidutta Tripathy; Editing by Ranjit Gangadharan) Keywords: SATYAM/
(devidutta.tripathy@thomsonreuters.com; +91 11 4178 1009; Reuters Messaging: devidutta.tripathy.reuters.com@reuters.net)
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http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=SATYAM.BO
**************************************************
http://www.finanznachrichten.de/...-8th-day-as-bidders-circle-020.htm
...The open offer is usually based on the average price over the last six months or some 335 rupees...
...'We are hoping that it won't be less than 90 rupees. So it's a punter's call to make some quick money,' Nagpal said....
28.01.2009 15:36
UPDATE 1-Indian govt says Satyam close to naming new head
By Devidutta Tripathy
NEW DELHI, Jan 28 (Reuters) - Satyam Computer Services (News) is close to finalising a new head to help the government-appointed board put the fraud-hit outsourcing firm back on track, a minister said on Wednesday.
Corporate Affairs Minister P.C. Gupta said the new head of Satyam would would not be called a chief executive, but declined to name the identified candidate.
'This gentleman has a vast experience of running large multinational and national companies in India,' he told television news channel CNBC TV18.
CNBC TV18, citing sources, later said that Homi R. Khusrokhan, a former managing director of Tata Chemicals, was the frontrunner to head Satyam.
The new head would need to work closely with the board, lift employee morale and stop key customers from joining State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. in cancelling contracts.
Satyam's new board, which last week said it had narrowed the shortlist for CEO and chief financial officer to three, has said it would outline the proposed management structure this week.
Satyam, India's No. 4 software exporter, has been battling for survival since founder Ramalinga Raju resigned as chairman earlier this month, saying profits had been falsified for years and $1 billion of cash on the books did not exist.
Since then the government has stepped in and appointed a new board to try to resolve India's biggest corporate fraud.
On Tuesday, the board named Boston Consulting Group as management advisor to help revive the firm, with Goldman Sachs and Indian firm Avendus appointed as investment bankers to identify strategic investors and obtain expressions of interest.
BIDDERS APLENTY
Satyam shares rose nearly 18 percent on Wednesday, an eighth successive rise, driven by expectations of potentials bidders for the firm. The rise took the shares to 55.45 rupees, their highest close since the fraud was revealed.
Despite the gains, the shares are only worth about $1.10, and are down 90 percent from their 2008 high of 544 rupees.
'The market is expecting some kind of an open offer,' said Gajendra Nagpal, CEO at Unicon Financial.
'We are hoping that it won't be less than 90 rupees. So it's a punter's call to make some quick money,' he said.
Engineering conglomerate Larsen&Toubro, which also runs a small software services firm, trebled its stake in Satyam to 12 percent last Friday.
On Tuesday, L&T's chairman said it would not be averse to raising its stake further, to 15 percent. Under Indian law, this would trigger an open offer for a further 20 percent.
The open offer is usually based on the average price over the last six months, which would be about 335 rupees, according to Thomson Reuters data, but Nagpal said there was a possibility the market regulator could relax rules as Satyam shares had plunged.
U.S. based outsourcer iGate said last week it would be interested in buying Satyam with help from private equity funds.
On Wednesday, a Hyderabad court dismissed bail petitions of Raju, his brother and former managing director Rama Raju, and former CFO Vadlamani Srinivas. They are currently being held in a Hyderabad jail.
(Writing by Narayanan Somasundaram; Editing by John Mair and Rupert Winchester) Keywords: SATYAM/
(narayanan.somasundaram@thomsonreuters.com; 91 22 6636 9068; Reuters Messaging narayanan.somasundaram.reuters.com@reuters.net)
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100 Prozent Gewinn – Satyam kurz vor Ernennung eines neuen Chefs
Leon Müller
Der in Schieflage geratene indische IT-Dienstleister Satyam Computer Services steht Medienberichten zufolge kurz vor der Ernennung eines neuen Chefs. Unterdessen konnten risikobereite Anleger in den zurückliegenden Tagen 100 Prozent Gewinn mit der Satyam-Aktie einfahren.
Der Bilanzskandal hat die Aktie von Indiens viertgrößtem IT-Dienstleister Satyam Computer Services zunächst in die Knie gezwungen. Das Unternehmen musste eingestehen, die Bilanz gefälscht zu haben. 50,4 der 53,6 Milliarden Rupien, die zum 30. September in der Bilanz als liquide Mittel und Bankreserven ausgewiesen wurden, waren und sind de facto nicht existent. In der Zwischenzeit ist der Gründer und Vorstandschef von Satyam, Ramalinga Raju, zurückgetreten.
Die Suche nach einem Nachfolger steht Medienberichten zufolge kurz vor dem Ende. Der in Indien für Corporate Affairs zuständige Minister P.C. Gupta sagte dem Nachrichtensender CNBC TV18, der neue Mann habe große Erfahrung in der Führung von multinationalen sowie nationalen indischen Konzernen, ohne dabei einen konkreten Namen zu nennen. In einem späteren Bericht brachte der Fernsehkanal dann Homi R. Khusrokhan ins Spiel, einen ehemaligen Manager von Tata Chemicals.
Kurskapriolen erweisen sich als gewinnbringend
Während die Suche nach einem Nachfolger für Ramalinga Raju andauert, hat sich die Aktie von Satyam Computer Services in den zurückliegenden Tagen um 100 Prozent verteuert. DER AKTIONÄR hatte risikobereiten Spekulanten am 20. Januar geraten – zu diesem Zeitpunkt notierte die Aktie bei 1,02 Dollar –, das Papier im Blick zu behalten. Am Mittwoch wurden die Anteilsscheine des IT-Dienstleisters im späten New Yorker Handel bei 2,04 Dollar gehandelt.
Obwohl die Lösung des Nachfolgeproblems bei Satyam kurz bevorsteht, bleibt das Papier für fundamental orientierte Anleger ungeeignet. Zu viele Fragen sind bislang unbeantwortet geblieben. Der Konzern sucht nach wie vor einen Käufer. Zudem steht zu befürchten, dass nach dem US-Versicherer State Farm Insurance weitere Kunden dem Unternehmen den Rücken zuwenden. Spekulanten indes bleiben weiter am Ball.
Wednesday, January 28, 2009, 1:13pm PST
Igate eyes pieces of rival Satyam
San Francisco Business Times - by Eric Young
Outsourcing company Igate Corp. said it would consider a bid for rival Satyam Computer Services Ltd. if the board of that beleaguered Indian company opts for a sale.
“I told them that if they are going down the path of splitting the company up we would be particularly interested,” said Phaneesh Murthy, CEO of Fremont-based Igate. “There may be interesting assets we would love to get our hands on.”
Igate has not make a formal offer.
Satyam was plunged into tumult after founder B. Ramalinga Raju admitted he overstated profits for several years and created a phony cash balance in excess of $1 billion. Prosecutors also accuse Raju of siphoning millions of dollars to buy land.
Satyam is scrambling to hold onto its customer base, which includes major blue chip companies like Citigroup Inc. (NYSE: C), Caterpillar Inc. (NYSE: CAT) and Coca-Cola Co. (NYSE: KO). The company’s board said it is lining up capital to continue operations. But it is hired investment banks to help the company explore options.
Igate helps businesses with tasks like running call centers, executing transactions and overseeing order entry, accounts receivable and purchasing. The company lists clients like General Electric Co. (NYSE: GE), Royal Bank of Canada (NYSE: RY) and Philip Morris International Inc.
The company recently spun off its staffing business in order to push more deeply into outsourcing work. Last year it opened an office in Mexico. Igate has 6,500 employees and offices in India, Canada, Malaysia, Australia and the United Kingdom.
The company, which reported revenue of $218.8 million in 2008, is planning to expand the industries it serves, Murthy said. The most likely is health care, given the administrative-heavy nature of that field.
Satyam’s stock, which is traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: SAY), declined as much as 89 percent since the revelations earlier this month. The company’s market capitalization stands at about $575 million.
a) auf die seit 8Tagen steigenden Kurse (Gewinnmitnahmen) &
b) Marktreaktion auf die zum 30.Januar erfolgende Handelsplatz-Veränderung &
c) mglw. auf unten angeührte Meldung
http://www.indiainfoline.com/news/innernews.asp?storyId=91621&lmn=1
Big block on Satyam
India Infoline News Service / Mumbai Jan 29, 2009 11:19
Almost 27mn equity shares of the company changed hands on the NSE.
Shares of Satyam Computers plunged by over 15% to Rs47.5 after 27mn equity shares of the company changed hands on the NSE. Almost 4% of the company’s equity was traded in a huge block.
Fresh month contracts in Satyam will not be introduced for the expiry month April 2009 on the expiration of January 2009 contracts.
All existing Satyam contracts (with expiry dates Feb 26,'09 and March 26, '09) will expire on January 29, 2009. No F&O contracts will be available in the SATYAMCOMP for trading from January 30, 2009 onwards.
The stock will however, continue to trade in the cash segment.
The scrip has touched an intra-day high of Rs60 and a low of Rs39 and has recorded volumes of over 8,00,00,000 shares on NSE.
29.01.2009 11:57
Fidelity buys 2.5 pct of Satyam for $19 mln
MUMBAI, Jan 29 (Reuters) - Asset manager Fidelity Investments bought a 2.5 percent stake in fraud-scarred Satyam Computer Services (News) for 915 million rupees ($18.7 million) through two block deals on Wednesday, stock exchange data showed.
Two funds managed by Fidelity bought a total of 17.13 million shares at a weighted average price of 53.4 rupees, data from the National Stock Exchange showed.
Satyam shares ended 10.1 percent lower at 49.85 rupees on Thursday. The company is struggling for survival after its founder quit as chairman this month disclosing profits were falsified for years.
Fidelity owned 3.41 percent of Satyam as at December, according to stock exchange filings. Many fund managers sold their stake in Satyam after the fraud was revealed.
($1=48.9 rupees)
(Reporting by Narayanan Somasundaram; Editing by Anshuman Daga) Keywords: SATYAM/FIDELITY
(narayanan.somasundaram@thomsonreuters.com; 91 22 6636 9068; Reuters Messaging narayanan.somasundaram.reuters.com@reuters.net)
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Seven suitors line up for Satyam: Tarun Das
29 Jan 2009, 1603 hrs IST, PTI
NEW DELHI: Scam-hit Satyam Computer has been approached by as many as seven possible suitors, including private equity players, even as the company's investment bankers are trying to find the best match.
"So far we are aware of four (companies that have approached Satyam Computer). But we have heard that another two or three firms are also interested," Satyam Computer board member Tarun Das, who is also the chief mentor of industry body CII told reporters here.
Investment bankers are talking to everybody and finding out which firm is interested, what is the level of seriousness and are evaluating the proposal before getting back to the board. The process is likely to take six weeks, Das added.
Earlier this week, the board of Satyam Computer Services appointed Goldman Sachs and Avendus Capital as investment bankers and mandated Boston Consulting Group (BCG) to act as its management adviser.
Asked whether Satyam's founder Ramalinga Raju had inflated employee numbers as claimed by the Andhra Pradesh police, Das said: "We have done a head count using external agencies and we believe in the basis of investigation that we are well over 50,000 people in Satyam. So I do not think that there is any inflated numbers."
Earlier, Andhra Pradesh CID had claimed in a court that there were 13,000 ghost employees on the rolls of the IT firm, following which the human resources department of Satyam Computer Services conducted a verification of the head count.
...The process of change in management control, if any, will take atleast 60 days from now.
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/...months/articleshow/4047746.cms
Change in Satyam mangement likely in two months
29 Jan 2009, 1639 hrs IST, Hema Ramakrishnan & Sreekala G, ET Bureau
HYDERABAD: The Satyam management has told its 53,000 employees that a change in management control of the tainted software firm was imminent and the process would take about two months from now.
"We will be informing our employees that investment bankers are evaluating strategic options which include possibilities of change in management control. We need to keep them informed as we are aware that employees will wait and watch to see how events unfold and keep their options open". said T Hari, Head Global Marketing and Communication, Satyam Computer Services. The process of change in management control, if any, will take atleast 60 days from now.
This is for the first time that the company plans to communicate a deadline on the possible ownership change. The software firm was founded two decades ago by the tainted founder B Ramalinga Raju, who is now in judicial custody after confessing to perpetrating a Rs 7,000 crore financial fraud.
Companies including engineering firm Larsen & Toubro, Tech Mahindra and iGate are in the race for acquiring Satyam. The company will be sold as an integrated entity and not in parts. Goldman Sachs and Avendus have been named the investment bankers to explore strategic options for Satyam Computers.
The new six member board on Tuesday said that employees of Satyam would be paid salaries for January from internal accruals and receivables. The salary normally gets credited on the last working day for employees in India. "Our annualized attrition continues to be in the range of 12.5 to 13%. We have not seen any mass exodus after the fiasco", the source said.
"We will wait till the first week of February or so to see if there is more clarity on the fate of the company. Attrition, if any, will be of employees who have put in 5-10 years as they will be valuable for poachers", said a senior level employee who wished not to be named.
According to Sudhakar Balakrishnan, Chief Executive Officer of Adecco India, employees who have spent long years with Satyam would not like to leave the company at this point in time. "They would like be part of the revival process headed by the newly appointed board. Besides, the market is dull, with recruitment by most IT companies showing a downward trend. The fear of retrenchment after the management change may be unfounded", he said.
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30.01.2009 06:21
India's Spice Group ready to put $408 mln in Satyam
NEW DELHI, Jan 30 (Reuters) - India's Spice Group is ready to invest about 20 billion rupees ($408 million) in Satyam Computer Services (News) and wants to buy a 51 percent stake in the fraud-scarred outsourcer, Spice Chairman B.K. Modi said.
'That is our desire,' Modi told Reuters on Friday. 'We want the money to go inside the company. For that they will have to make a preferential issue. If I buy shares from the market, the money will not go into the company.'
Modi said the group had submitted on Thursday its proposal to the government-appointed new board of Satyam.
'We have also talked to two, three board members informally.'
Spice Group has diversified operations including mobile handset manufacturing, mobile software development, back-office operations, entertainment and retail.
Last year, it sold its mobile telecoms services business to Idea Cellular for 21.76 billion rupees.
'That is one of the sources (for funding). But we have other channels,' Modi said, adding that the group was capable to fund a possible deal internally.
($1=49 rupees)
(Reporting by Devidutta Tripathy; Editing by Ranjit Gangadharan) Keywords: SATYAM/SPICE
(devidutta.tripathy@thomsonreuters.com; +91 11 4178 1009; Reuters Messaging: devidutta.tripathy.reuters.com@reuters.net)
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:-))
heute hoffe ich auf kurse über 2 USD, damit sollte wieder platz nach oben sein...
mal schauen.....
lg an 0815ax
Smart Investor - Saytam kein Investment
09:06 03.02.09
Wolfratshausen (aktiencheck.de AG) - Die Experten von "Smart Investor" raten bei der Aktie von Satyam Computer Services (Profil) kein gutes Geld schlechtem hinterher zu werfen.
Satyam sei an der Börse vor einigen Monaten noch 7 Mrd. USD wert gewesen. Inzwischen sei die Aktie zum Pennystock mutiert, da der Firmengründer und einstige Star Ramalinga Raju die Bilanzen sieben Jahre lang gefälscht und um mehr als 1 Mrd. USD aufgebläht haben solle. Von seinen angeblichen Bankguthaben seien 94% nicht existent. Finanzprofis würden inzwischen Parallelen zu dem folgenschweren Kollaps des US-Energiehändlers Enron ziehen.
Es sei nun zu befürchten, dass die für Indien enorm wichtige IT-Branche unter den Folgen des Skandals stark leiden werde, da Kunden Outsourcing-Aufträge überdenken könnten.
Es sei ungewiss, ob der indische Konzern ausgerechnet während der größten Finanzkrise nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg von einem anderen Unternehmen übernommen werde. Ein Überleben aus eigener Kraft erscheine noch unwahrscheinlicher, da die globale Krise auf die IT-Branche voll durchschlagen könnte und Banken den Kredithahn zudrehen würden. Realistischer erscheine da schon der schwere Gang zum Insolvenzrichter.
Die Experten von "Smart Investor" raten Anlegern sich bei der Aktie von Satyam Computer Services nicht vom optisch niedrigen Kurs blenden zu lassen und kein gutes Geld schlechtem hinterher zu werfen. (Ausgabe 02) (03.02.2009/ac/a/a)
hier der ganze Text: http://www.it-times.de/news/nachricht/datum////...e-kapitalerhoehung/
bin gespannt, was hier noch los sein wird, die nächsten Wochen werden sicher spannend!
Hat hier jemand auch investiert, oder bin ich der einzige?
lg, ice
ich bin optimist, die kurse eher nicht!
lg, ice
Daher pflege ich jetzt nur noch Threads mit News etc., bei denen ich den Thread eröffnet habe...
ps.: Kursaussagen gebe ich auch nicht mehr
ax