Join today and have your say! It’s FREE!

Become a member today, It's free!

We will not release or resell your information to third parties without your permission.
Please Try Again
{{ error }}
By providing my email, I consent to receiving investment related electronic messages from Stockhouse.

or

Sign In

Please Try Again
{{ error }}
Password Hint : {{passwordHint}}
Forgot Password?

or

Please Try Again {{ error }}

Send my password

SUCCESS
An email was sent with password retrieval instructions. Please go to the link in the email message to retrieve your password.

Become a member today, It's free!

We will not release or resell your information to third parties without your permission.

Bullboard - Stock Discussion Forum First Uranium Corporation T.FIU

TSX:FIU - Post Discussion

First Uranium Corporation > Does anyone have a credible plan?
View:
Post by AIGswap on Apr 05, 2012 7:04pm

Does anyone have a credible plan?

Say the asset sales are voted down.  As at Dec 31 2011, FIU had negative working capital of $52.3mm.  The company is obviously having liquidity issues so it had to take a $10mm bridge loan from GDO.  This will be payable on demand after the deal is terminated.  FIU will also be responsible for the $2.5mm break fee.  So FIU will have to pony up $12.5mm to GDO.  Last quarter, FIU burned through $5mm in cash, so we can assume that whole $10mm from the loan has been spent.

 

So if the deal is terminated, FIU has $64.8mm in near term payments due (negative working capital as Dec 31 + bridge loan + break fee), with $12.5mm due immediately.  This is in addition to the $315mm in debt due within the next 12 months. Yes the debentures can be flipped into shares, which will take-over the equity, but the notes are secured by MWS, and FIU does not have an option to pay in shares.

 

Does anyone have a credible plan to deal with this?  Are any shareholders willing to step up for a $200mm rights offering to recapitalize the company?

 

Why do you think that FIU wouldn't accept the best deal possible?  Isn't it clear that this was the best they could come up with after trying to sell the company / assets over the past 7 months?  Also, FIU has a "fiduciary out", which enables them to accept any superior proposals.  Have any come along yet?  Have you ever considered that these assets aren't very good?  Clearly with the shares going from $13.00 to
0.13, the market has figured this out. 

 

I am looking at this from a prospective FIU equity purchaser.  Recovery on the shares could be up to
0.26.  Shares are at 0.14.  Obviously the market disagrees that this can be sold for more, but its almost a 100% return if this deal closes as expected. 

 

If this doesn't close and a very large equity financing does not happen, then what?  How would the company meet its short terms liquidity needs, which are substantial?  Why wouldn't FIU immediately file for creditor protection under CCAA?  Have you thought about the shares value under a bankruptcy filing scenario?  I haven't heard of one credible plan to deal with these pressing financial issues, besides the current asset sale.

Comment by pillio24 on Apr 05, 2012 7:07pm
spot on algswap!
Comment by colt451 on Apr 05, 2012 7:23pm
Great, a well thought, credible post to address,  Can I begin with your initial premise? FIU does not have negative working capital, I think you confused what has occured. FIU has at least 10mil IN working capital to the best of our knowledge it was published in the last report. You are confusing the impairment charge with working capital. Furthermore, the company is not obviously having ...more  
Comment by pillio24 on Apr 05, 2012 7:29pm
the market valued the company between .14 - .17 way before any mention of an asset sale.
Comment by colt451 on Apr 05, 2012 7:34pm
Here are the quotes from the last financials and the last NR to support my arguments    First Uranium reported a consolidated gross profit of $1.8** million for Q3 2012, compared to a consolidated gross loss of $1.2**  As at December 31, 2011, current assets were $27.3 million (March 31, 2011: $73.4 million) and included cash and cash equivalents of $10.6 million (March 31, 2011 ...more  
Comment by lefmike1 on Apr 05, 2012 7:35pm
First off get your data right, The negative working capital you like to call it is FIU's creative accounting at work,  What they did was take the Gold they sent to GW and billed it as a loss of the total amount meaning instead of the company making so many they deducted that amount right off the top, so yeah they booked a loss but an actual cap hit loss you;re incorrect and based on your ...more  
Comment by pillio24 on Apr 05, 2012 7:57pm
So fiu creative accounting methods made it look like the company lost money but the company really made a profit? I thought that was supposed to work the other way around?
Comment by lefmike1 on Apr 05, 2012 8:36pm
LOL too much....................... Yeah  it's suppose to UNLESS you wanted the company to look so bad so your buddies who hired you a few years ago can get it for a steal................  Figure it out...................... Yeah  I get it now... I want my friend to have the company,   they maybe they promised me a nest egg at the end of the day,   I'll show ...more  
Comment by JBBminer on Apr 06, 2012 1:03am
PLLLEEAAASSSEEE....ENOUGH already.  Refer to this poster as MR. PILON.  Perhaps you should have done your homework before you speak your mind in front of bag holders.  1mil + shares.  yep and tck.b can be sold for 20bil tomorrow.  yepper.. sure it can.  cows jump over moons too!!!!  somebody beat you with an stupid stick...huh
The Market Update
{{currentVideo.title}} {{currentVideo.relativeTime}}
< Previous bulletin
Next bulletin >

At the Bell logo
A daily snapshot of everything
from market open to close.

{{currentVideo.companyName}}
{{currentVideo.intervieweeName}}{{currentVideo.intervieweeTitle}}
< Previous
Next >
Dealroom for high-potential pre-IPO opportunities
USER FEEDBACK SURVEY ×

Be the voice that helps shape the content on site!

At Stockhouse, we’re committed to delivering content that matters to you. Your insights are key in shaping our strategy. Take a few minutes to share your feedback and help influence what you see on our site!

The Market Online in partnership with Stockhouse