Saturday, January 12, 2008

ACt 2: PeopleSupport

The dance has entered its next phase. After PeopleSupport (PSPT) rejected a bid by IPVG for $15 a share, it is now on the receiving end of a revised $17 all-cash counter offer. PSPT can no longer treat this bid in the same way it treated the first -- a brush off with a curt letter.

A copy of the IPVG (IP) letter to Mr. Rosenzweig available here.

It is unfortunate that the Board of Directors of the Company has not engaged us in serious discussions despite repeated attempts to have confidential dialogues regarding our proposal. We are also disappointed that the directors do not see the merit of our proposal despite the fact that it is directly beneficial to the shareholders of the Company.

However, upon careful deliberation of the recent initiatives, revised earnings guidance, and new strategic planning the Company announced in its statement of December 12, 2007, we are prepared to make a revised proposal to acquire the Company at a purchase price of $17.00/share. This new proposal represents approximately 34.81% premium to the Company’s 60-day weighted average closing price of $12.61/share including the close of market yesterday, January 10, 2008.

As the major shareholder of PSPT, much rests on how Chairman & CEO Lance Rosenzweig wants to finish this. If he is truly ready to give up PSPT, then he merely needs to extract as much cash as possible, and the best way to maximize the final price is to get another dance partner.

If he wants to hang on, he'll need to bring lots more ammunition vs IPVG, rather than just PowerPoints and press releases about how rosy the picture is for PSPT remaining an independent company. Many PSPT shareholders with lawyers on speed dial won't hesitate to sue if he gives up this opportunity to cash out. No need to bet what Galleon (24% owners of PSPT) are advising Lance to do.

It's been more than a month since IPVG made its first unsolicited offer, ample time for any other interested party to emerge from the woodworks. Our call: we are coming close to a final price.

Thursday, January 3, 2008

Medical Fallout

There's always a downside. Here's one view of the human cost not carried on the balance sheets of India's mighty BPO industry.


There's mounting medical evidence that if people are forced to stay up night after night their biorhythms are disrupted and they are liable to pay a cost in terms of both physical and psychological health. Elevated pay isn't sufficient compensation for a heart attack brought on at 30. We can't drive young people into the BPO industry by painting a superficially alluring image of its rewards, then shrug and turn away when they face serious health issues. Experts are concerned that the brewing crisis could undermine India's economic boom, which has been driven to a large extent by the services sector. A study by the Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations estimated that heart diseases, strokes and diabetes cost India $9 billion in lost productivity in 2005. They forecast this figure to grow to a whopping $200 billion in the next decade, with the IT sector predicted to be among the hardest-hit.
I won't be a pied piper singing the praises of the capitalism system, but the long-term view argues for us to have faith. When an industry's health woes become a big enough problem, the solutions will come. If entrepreneurs have set up bars catering to the graveyard shift workers -- blackened windows to simulate night even though it's noontime -- why can't a whole city be transformed? Interiors of buildings are now made to follow the daylight hours of countries halfway around the globe; why can't the district where the building belongs also follow those same hours? If the human body can't evolve to cope with altered circadian rhythms, why the environment will have to be reshaped. If we all live on borrowed time, why can't we advance that clock +12 hours?