In keeping with our penchant for stories about idiosyncratic investors who trade in odd securities found off the beaten track, we bring you perhaps the best unknown activist investment of 2009. With a far away land, a young protagonist, an odd treasure, an unexpected twist and a narrow escape, it’s a bullwhip and a fedora short of being an Indiana Jones movie. In the role of young protagonist is Nicholas Bolton, a 27-year old investor who made A$4.5M ($4M) almost bringing down BrisConnections, the developer of a A$4.8B ($4.3B) Australian toll road. What’s most amazing is that he achieved this with an initial stake worth just A$47,000 ($42,000). In so doing, he became the bête noire of his fellow BrisConnections investors, attracted the attention of the Australia Securities and Investments Commission (similar to the SEC) and drew the ire of the Australian media, who variously described him as a “meddling kid,” “Australia’s foremost prat,” “the ultimate poster-boy for the much-maligned Generation Y” and “the best proof that karma does not exist.” How did he do it and why all the vitriol? Read on.
BrisConnections: The Temple of Doom
Several unusual elements make the Nicholas Bolton versus BrisConnections story reasonably complex. Bear with us, to understand the story it’s necessary to understand the BrisConnections security in detail.
BrisConnections, backed by Deutsche Bank, Credit Suisse Group, JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Macquarie Bank, raised A$1.23B ($1.16B) in July last year through the sale of an unusual equity security called a stapled unit. The BrisConnections stapled unit is a unit in the trust holding the toll road assets and a share in the corporate trustee. The trust unit and the share must trade together, and hence are said to be stapled. The reasons for creating such a security are beyond the scope of this post, but suffice it to say that stapled securities offer certain tax benefits. What really makes this story interesting is that the BrisConnections stapled units were issued on an installment basis. Installment means that on application purchasers paid A$1 ($0.90) for each stapled unit and were then obliged to make two further installments of A$1 ($0.90) each, payable nine months and 18 months after the IPO. In a world of rapidly rising stock prices, installment securities present no problem. When stockmarkets are in decline, however, the securities can trade down dramatically as investors attempt to avoid paying further installments.
The BrisConnections’ IPO tanked spectacularly, dropping 60% on the first day of trading before falling into terminal decline. A few months before the first installment was to fall due, the units had traded down to A$0.001 (that’s 1/10th of a cent). At a unit price of $0.001, a BrisConnections unit became a very dangerous security for those not realising that the units came with two A$1.00 installments for each $0.001 paid. That meant, for example, that a purchaser of $1,000 of the units owed $2M in installments and a purchaser of $10,000 owed $20M. It seems that there were many purchasers at $0.001 who were unable to fulfil their obligations and then decided that they would rather not own BrisConnections units. Unfortunately for them, they had run out of greater fools. As Charlie Munger might say, they were like the mouse who cries, “Let me out of the trap, I’ve decided I don’t want the cheese.” A month out from the first installment, there were ~70M units on the ask at $0.001 – the minimum price at which a security can trade on the Australian Stock Exchange – and no bids.
Enter Nicholas Bolton.
Bolton: Raider of the Lost Ark
Bolton had started acquiring BrisConnections units through an investment company, Australian Style Investments, in November last year. Before too long, he’d spent A$47,000 to acquire a 15% stake and become BrisConnections largest unitholder. He’d also taken on a A$94M liability, money that he did not have. What he did next comes straight from the World Poker Tour. No, he didn’t fold. He went all in, upping his stake to 19.9%. Why 19.9%? Under Australian law, a purchaser of 20% of a company’s stock is obliged to make a takeover bid to all remaining stockholders. By sitting at 19.9%, Bolton had the option of making a bid for the remaining stock, but not the obligation. He then approached BrisConnections about refinancing the liability. When BrisConnections failed to respond, he moved to have management removed and the trust dissolved. The application achieved its end: It got the attention of management. It was, however, a long shot. Bolton needed the support of 75 per cent of his fellow investors to have the dissolution resolution passed. It was also not clear that it would prevent the fund from collecting the first installment. Under Australian law, the trust had 21 days to call a general meeting and 45 days to hold it, by which date the notice demanding the first installment fee would have been issued. If BrisConnections management was nervous about the dissolution, they didn’t show it in the media. The chairman, a Mr. Trevor Rowe, described the application as “frivolous,” while a spokesman described it as “a mere sideshow to a $5B infrastructure project that is promising to provide 11,000 jobs.” They also made it known that a liquidation of the trust would not extinguish the first A$1 liability owing on each unit. BrisConnections advisers where not so sanguine: one, Macquarie, co-underwriter and financier of BrisConnections, brought an injunction action against him seeking to prevent him from holding the meeting. In a two-minute hearing, the judge did not uphold any of Macquarie’s claims, or grant the injunction to stop the meeting of unitholders from proceeding. It was swift justice, and it seemed to set the scene for something very rare: a highly entertaining general meeting.
The Last Crusade
After succeeding against Macquarie and BrisConnections in an extensive court battle, it seemed that BrisConnections was a general meeting away from dissolution. Bolton held 19.9% of the units on issue, and a sizeable number of the other holders had purchased their units at $0.001. Perhaps sensing that Bolton had the momentum, management told those investors present at the meeting were told their units would be worthless if BrisConnections was liquidated, as BrisConnections would have ”zero value” as a company. Bolton, however, was not one of the investors present at the meeting. Why? He had already voted against the resolutions he had proposed and defended at court. BrisConnections chairman told the startled unitholders present at the meeting that Australian Style Investments had voted against all seven resolutions when its proxies were received several days before the meeting. Accordingly, the special resolution fell short of the required 75% voting threshold. The unitholders might have seen Bolton as a savior after he went to court to ensure the vote took place, but they were cursing his name by the end of the day. What had happened to cause Bolton to vote against his own resolution?
Unknown to the investors at the meeting, Bolton had already sold his voting rights to Thiess John Holland, the design and construction contractor for the Airport Link. The price? A$4.5M. It seems this had been Bolton’s strategy all along. Rowe, the chairman, described to Inside Business a discussion he had with Bolton as he was searching for a buyer for his voting rights:
I called [Nicholas Bolton’s] adviser and asked him what he had in mind. He mentioned some numbers to me. I said I thought they were pretty excessive and I gave him a lower number. And he said well Mr Bolton needs $5 million otherwise he is not going to do this. And we thought about it and we decided that we would not engage further.
…
I said to him when he proposed a number which I thought was preposterous that it’s more like a two to three [million] number than a seven and half [million] number.
…
I didn’t engage in a negotiation.
Rowe didn’t want to cough up for the votes. Thiess, however, was happy to part with A$4.5M to prevent the A$4.8B project from falling over. BrisConnections other investors were unhappy. A hedge fund that was BrisConnections’s second biggest investor at 13%, threatened legal action, telling the The Sydney Morning Herald:
He’s not going to get (the $4.5 million), I can promise you that.
…
He’s just ruined his corporate life forever.
…
I’d trust Mr Bolton like I’d trust a rabbit with a lettuce leaf.
Post mortem
To date, we are not aware of any proceedings being started against Bolton. It seems he got away with the A$4.5M. Not a bad payday for an initial $47,000 investment and a little negotiation. What about the liability? Did Bolton know that the securities came with that huge downside? It seems he did. He contained the liability to his investment vehicle, Australian Style Investments. The A$4.5M was paid to an another entity of Bolton’s, Australian Style Holdings, to quarantine it from the $120M liability in Australian Style Investments. The Weekend Financial Review also reported that Bolton had been searching for an opportunity like BrisConnections for a while: A company in which he could take a large interest quickly and easily. In a confidential strategy document emailed to Ernst & Young and Deloitte in early December last year, Bolton detailed a plan to increase his holding in BrisConnections up to 49.9 per cent of the listed units and then recapitalize the company. Those advisers rejected his takeover plan, so he adjusted his strategy in late December or early January to a liquidation. He told one newspaper he was “playing a game” from the start” and “the result of that game was to extract a benefit from the carcass of BrisConnections:”
I took a commercial approach to this before buying in. I saw an opportunity to improve the position of unit holders through our entry in the company, and the actions we were planning to undertake. It was a commercial transaction, intended for commercial gain, for unit holders and for myself.
To the extent there was an altruistic outcome it was unintended, in that my interests were aligned with the interests of all other unit holders. But there was always a commercial intention on our part. We didn’t seek the tag of white knight, and it doesn’t fit.
[Let] me say it would be commercially remiss and foolish of me, on a matter of indifference, not to take a dollar or to leave a dollar. It’s a commercial decision.
Conclusion
What’s the lesson? It’s better to be lucky than good? Well, yes, but that’s doing a disservice to young Nick. We think the lesson is that there’s value in the control or influence of a company beyond the underlying intrinsic value of the stock. It’s why we have in the past followed activist investors into stocks when it’s possible that there’s no underlying asset value, and it’s why we’ll do it again in the future.
What happened to the other investors? Well, it’s a happy ending for them too. Macquarie Bank has now thrown them a lifeline and agreed to buy their obligations if they give up their holding and 100 per cent of their units for free.
So that’s our nominee for the best unknown activist investment of 2009. Let us know if you’ve got a better one.
[Full disclosure: We don’t have a holding in BrisConnections.]
i don’t think anyone should look up to this kid. he did a backdoor deal, took advantage of a lot of shareholders and lied to everyone.
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Did Bolton know that the securities came with that huge downside? It seems he did. He contained the liability to his investment vehicle, Australian Style Investments.
That’s not quite right, he went a step further and bought puts for his position from a friend of his family who had no assets. So if it all went against him, he was going to put the liability to that guy, who clearly would have simply declared bankruptcy.
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You’re assuming that he could in fact put them, or that the receiver would regard the transfer as valid, which I don’t think would have been assured in any way. I’d rather keep the cash and the liability separate, and then fight to hold on to the money.
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@Colin:
As a matter of law, this was a pretty good bet. He knew that it would be worth it to someone who stood to make a lot of money on the project to prevent its unwinding.
He wasn’t a fiduciary, so he’s not obliged to consider the other shareholders. He bought 19.9% and was voting to make himself as much money as possible. Revlon duties don’t attach to shareholders.
You are probably right that if Macquarie (sp?) decided to demand payment from all of the unitholders, this might have ended badly. Specifically, if Mbank sued every unitholder to enforce the future payments, won, and filed involuntary petitions for bankruptcy against every single unitholder (after unsuccessfully attempting to levy the judgment against their assets) this would have been bad for the protagonist. They could have recovered the 4.5m as a fraudulent transfer, in the manner you suggest.
I’m not sure how expensive lawyers in Australia are, but in the states, this would be a laughably bad economic proposition. Plus, it would probably wind up with the road company filing for bankruptcy itself while they waited on their manifold lawsuits to come to fruition so they could pay their bills. And, since you know that this whole thing is basically a way for politicians to build roads, you know it’s not going to come out this way–the politicians will bail it all out.
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@Harry
Regarding his lack of obligation to other shareholders, I was more referring to the fact he said his transaction was good for him and other unitholders, as if that outcome was planned, not whether he was legally required to do so.
Here is Bolton’s quote “It was a commercial transaction, intended for commercial gain, for unit holders and for myself.”
On the issue of MBank suing for unitholders to fulfill their obligations, presumably all unitholders will either make their payments to maintain their shares, or they will freely relinquish their units to MBank to quash their financial obligations. Granted MBank will probably become BC’s majority shareholder and by default the voting owner.
I assume MBank didn’t accept ASI’s unit shares and attached liability since they had legally been stripped of their sole remaining value (the voting rights), this point wasn’t specified in the story. In such case, MBank through BC, should be suing ASI and ASH to return the $4.5 m dollars.
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Is protagonist spelled with to “a”s in Australia?
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Possibly I don’t understand what happened here, but this seems like there was no reason for Bolton to believe prior to the events unfolding that Macquarie Bank would offer to buy the stapled unit liabilities in exchange for the assets. So there was no reason to believe there would be a good outcome for other investors or ASI.
Did Macquarie Bank buy ASI’s liabilites also (minus the already sold voting rights on those assets)? If they didn’t, and ASI still owes BC $120 m on stapled unit liabilities, then all Bolton did was buy an asset, strip and sell its value, then leave the remaining liability in a shell company. I believe this would be illegal in the US, and BC could drive ASI into bankruptcy. The bankruptcy judge would then possibly be able to encumber the $4.5 m profit of Bolton in ASH.
This seems less like good strategery, than possibly some dumb good luck on Bolton’s part. Or do I misunderstand something?
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HAHAAHAH!!! that is one of the best investment stories i’ve ever written. that guy should get an award for having such big brass ones. that is great.
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wow… that was a great write up on one of the more interesting situations I have heard of!
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