Back in December, Diana Shipping Inc. spun off 80% of its 55% interest in Diana Containerships Inc. by distributing to its shareholders 2,667,066 shares. The shares began to trade on NASDAQ in January of this year.
Subsequently, on May 9th, Diana Containerships filed an F-1 registration statement for a follow-on offering of common shares. The shares closed that day at $12.64 per share. On May 31st, the company filed a press release announcing a follow-on offering of 14 million shares and a concurrent $20 million private placement of common shares to Diana Shipping. The offering, which was upsized to 14.25 million shares due to investor interest, was priced on June 10th at $7.50/share, a 27% discount from the closing price the day of the public announcement. While substantial, it needs to be put in context. On May 2nd the Dow Jones Industrial Index hit a recent high of 12,807.36, which began a steady six week market decline, its longest slump since 2002. This was certainly not a propitious moment for an equity offering. In fact from the date of filing to the date of pricing the market as measured by the DJI fell 5.8%. If in fact the window for equity offerings was open it must have been barely a crack with investors clamoring for a substantial discount given the falling market and only being receptive, in this instance, because of the good name attached to the deal.
Diana Shipping Inc. announced, on Tuesday, that it had successfully raised approximately $132 million for its previously announced project involving the formation of a company to invest in containerships over the next 12 to 18 months. Diana will be investing $50 million or approximately 38% of the equity with the balance provided by institutional and accredited investors in a private transaction.
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By Kevin Oates
…in the longer term shipping should correct but quality, transparency and financial strength are key to survival.
Despite the tough market and the general lack of ship finance, Marine Money’s Greek Ship Finance Forum again filled the seats in Athens. With 310 delegates and speakers and some 40 more for the TEN Ltd lunch, there was plenty gossip and exchange of views at the 11th Annual conference held on the 8th of October 2009.
The event had started with a speaker’s dinner the previous night co-hosted by Navios Maritime Holdings and was to end in the early hours of the following morning at the Capital Party co-hosted by Capital Product Partners LP at a well-known Athens nightclub. Even if the market is tough, we still know how to enjoy ourselves.
Back at the conference, our day began with Guy Verberne, a leading economist at Fortis Bank (Nederland) telling us that the economic recovery has come and it may well be sustainable. China, he says, has plenty foreign reserves to prolong it’s stimulus package for as long as it needs and he sees no meaningful cutbacks from the stimulus packages of western governments, at least through 2010. A risk is a double dip in 2011 if we get too bogged down in debt.
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