It is reasonable to conclude that, absent a takeover deal such as the one Williams has refused, the company’s stock is nearly fully valued. The consensus price target for the stock is $60.36, according to Thomson/First Call, and the stock traded Thursday at a high of about $57.70. It closed last Friday at $48.34 and opened Monday at $60.86, following the revelation that the company had rejected the $64 a share offer. At Thursday’s trading high, the potential upside is less than 5%.
We do not want to put words in the mouths of the analysts at JPMorgan and Tudor Pickering, but if either could foresee an offer of more than $64 a share for Williams, would it not make sense for the brokers to tell their clients to buy more Williams shares?
If Energy Transfer is to be believed, Williams dodged all attempts at discussions for several months before declining the offer. Williams has said that the Energy Transfer offer “significantly undervalues Williams and would not deliver value commensurate with what Williams expects to achieve on a standalone basis.” That means that the company thinks that its “standalone” plans were going to achieve share price growth of about a third — from $48 to $64 — in a few months.
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The only surprise to the recent downgrades to Williams stock is that only two of the 11 brokers following the stock have made the move.
Shares of Williams traded down about 1.3% in the noon hour Thursday, at $56.60 in a 52-week range of $40.07 to $61.38.
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