YRC Does Reverse Stock Split 1 for 25.....

chefdennis

Veteran Expediter
They are still fighting....


YRC Worldwide triggers reverse-stock split; share price jumps

Friday, October 1, 2010
Kansas City Business Journal
YRC Worldwide triggers reverse-stock split; share price jumps - Kansas City Business Journal

YRC Worldwide Inc. shares surged, then plummeted Friday after the company executed a reverse-stock split.

Shares for the Overland Park-based company (Nasdaq: YRCWD) converted from 25 cents a share at the end of trading Thursday to $6.25, reflecting the 1-for-25 share split.

By the end of Friday, however, the share price had fallen 86 cents, or almost 14 percent, to $5.39.

YRC is pursuing a new game plan — including potentially extended union concessions — for getting the company through a multiyear slump. Part of that plan included triggering a 1-for-25 reverse-stock split Friday to cut the ballooning number of shares and boost their value, keeping YRC shares from being delisted.

The split reduced the number of outstanding common shares from 1.2 billion to 48 million. More important, the company wanted to bring its stock price to exceed the benchmark of $1 so it could continue to be listed on the Nasdaq exchange.

YRC has scheduled an Oct. 7 hearing to appeal Nasdaq’s move to delist the stock.

Although the stock price is well above the previous 52-week high, at least one analyst fears that later plans to convert debt into stock might dilute the stock again and had advised clients on Thursday to sell their shares after the reverse-stock split was complete.

Also Friday, Nasdaq temporarily changed YRC’s stock symbol from YRCW to YRCWD. Nasdaq said on its website that the suffix “D” is a new tool indicating “a stock split or some type of reorganization.” The symbol will revert back to YRCW on Oct. 28.

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Analysts have misgivings about YRC Worldwide concessions deal

Thursday, September 30, 2010
Kansas City Business Journal - by David Twiddy Staff Writer
Analysts have misgivings about YRC Worldwide concessions deal - Kansas City Business Journal

RC Worldwide Inc. isn’t getting much support from Wall Street for a tentative agreement meant to preserve the company through a combination of employee concessions and restructured finances.

Shares for the Overland Park-based company (Nasdaq: YRCW) fell 7 cents — 22 percent — in trading Thursday.

YRC and the International Brotherhood of Teamsters announced the agreement on Wednesday, arguing that it’s the best option for making the struggling trucking giant more competitive and preventing another potential brush with bankruptcy.

Chief among the $350 million in proposed cost savings is pushing out the end date of an ongoing 15 percent wage cut from March 2013 to March 2015 and allowing YRC to continue avoiding employee pension contributions until June, when it will pay 25 percent of the effective rate.

The agreement also requires YRC to get commitments for an additional $300 million in financing by year’s end and to get rid of much of its $1.2 billion in outstanding debt, probably by converting it to stock.

That worried Jason Seidl, an analyst with Dahlman Rose & Co. who noted that the company’s stock ballooned to more than 1 billion outstanding shares during the past year as it dealt with its turnaround.

“We are concerned that an equity issuance would further dilute shares and alienate existing investors,” Seidl said in a report Thursday.

Seidl already has misgivings about whether Teamsters members will agree to a third round of concessions, especially as freight levels are rising and other carriers are reversing wage cuts.

YRC plans to deal with the immediate problem of having so many shares by triggering a 1-for-25 reverse-stock split on Oct. 1, which it said would reduce the number of outstanding shares to around 48 million.

Nasdaq has warned the company to get its share price above $1, or it will be kicked off the stock exchange.

David Ross, an analyst with Stifel Nicolaus, told clients Thursday that he saw the stock split as an opportunity, advising them to sell their shares after the stock split is completed, according to the Central Penn Business Journal.

He estimated that shares would be worth as much as $8 each after the split.

Meanwhile, J. Douglas Woodrich, an analyst with Longbow Research, focused on the employee concessions.

He said in a report that he continued to warn investors away from the stock but that he thought the concessions were doable and should help keep the company focused on finding a successor for retiring CEO Bill Zollars.

“We do view these changes as significantly positive as it creates some cost certainty for the next four (plus) years,” Woodrich wrote. “We believe YRCW should be able to survive at least through 2011, and we believe the changes announced yesterday significantly improve the company’s long-term chances.”
 

ATeam

Senior Member
Retired Expediter
As the story pointed out, the reverse stock split was done to keep the company shares from being dropped by a major stock exchange (NASDAQ). A reverse stock split does nothing to increase the value of the stock a shareholder holds.

Say a stock is selling for $0.10 a share and you own 1,000 shares. The value of your shares would be $100 ($0.10 x 1,000).

If the company does a reverse stock split such that ten shares become one share that is now worth a dollar, you would end up with 100 shares worth $1.00 each; leaving the value of your shares at the same $100.

A reverse stock split such as this has the same effect as turning ten dimes into a $1 bill.

In YRCW's case, the reverse split serves a purpose, namely to keep the company's shares trading on the NASDAQ.

If this company survives at all, it will do so only as a shadow of its former self.
 
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Moot

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
A reverse stock split does nothing to increase the value of the stock a shareholder holds.

A straight forward stock split such as a 2 for 1 also does nothing to increase the value of a stock a shareholder holds. A stock split will only increase the amount of outstanding shares or in the case of a reverse stock split, decrease the amount of outstanding shares.


If this company survives at all, it will do so only as a shadow of its former self.

It already is a shadow of its former self. Actually a shadow of its two former selves; Yellow Freight and Roadway.
 

Phoenix4774

Seasoned Expediter
Does anyone swing trade or watch the market while driving each day? Some brokers such as Thinkorswim have a free feed to CNBC. It seems like the job would lend way to this well. I wouldn't try daytrading per say, but swing trading would be doable.

One of my reasons for liking driving is this lax atmosphere where one has time to monitor the market. Any second shift job would work too though.
 
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