Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Charoen’s F&N to Spin Off Property Unit in Singapore Listing


Charoen’s F&N to Spin Off Property Unit in Singapore Listing

Fraser & Neave Ltd. (FNN), controlled by Thailand’s richest man, said it plans to spin off its property business from operations including beverages and publishing through a Singapore listing at the end of the year.
The 130-year-old conglomerate will offer to its shareholders two shares of the property company Frasers Centrepoint Ltd. for every F&N stock held, according to a company statement handed out at a Singapore briefing today.
F&N is spinning off a division with S$9 billion ($7 billion) of assets as of June, allowing both companies to focus on their separate expansion strategies. The move follows the S$13.8 billion takeover by Thai billionaire Charoen Sirivadhanabhakdi, whose company will vote in favor of the transaction, according to the statement.
“It’s a good move because historically, there has been a holding company discount on the group because of the combined businesses of property and non-property,” Goh Han Peng, an analyst at DMG & Partners Securities Pte in Singapore, said. “By separating them, the individual businesses can be valued separately and the food and beverage can obtain the full valuation that they deserve.”
F&N shares have fallen 43 percent this year after a one-time distribution to shareholders following the sale of its brewery stake. It last traded at S$5.49 before the trading halt for the announcement.

Independent Strategies

The listing of the property arm is expected in November or December, according to the statement, and the two companies will be traded separately on the Singapore exchange.
“The listing will enhance Frasers Centrepoint’s profile and enable us to pursue our growth strategies independently,” Lim Ee Seng, chief executive officer of Frasers Centrepoint, said in the statement. He said at a press briefing today he expects to work in partnerships with Charoen’s TCC group and is in talks with them and looking at some of their hotels outside of Thailand.
The proposal also allows F&N to focus on its food and beverage business, while enhancing the public image of Frasers Centrepoint, F&N Chief Financial Officer Hui Choon Kit said at a press conference today. He said it’s an appropriate time for the property unit to be separated because of its size.

Hospitality Trust

F&N will be on the look out for acquisitions for food and beverage companies, Hui said.
The property company is also considering plans for a hospitality trust, according to the statement. F&N said earlier this month it’s considering setting up a real estate investment trust made up of its hospitality assets. It has received proposals from investment banks in relation to the IPO, though considerations are at a preliminary stage, F&N said.
Frasers Centrepoint has a S$2.4 billion pipeline of commercial and retail properties as well as S$1.65 billion worth of hospitality assets that could be injected into its property trusts, Lim said, adding that Charoen is keen to build scalable businesses for the group.
Charoen, who acquired F&N through his company Thai Beverage Pcl (THBEV), has a net worth of $7.2 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
DBS Group Holdings Ltd., United Overseas Bank Ltd. (UOB) and Morgan Stanley are financial advisers for the transaction.

F&N the latest group to spin off property assets

F&N the latest group to spin off property assets

The Singapore-based group, bought this year by Thai billionaire Charoen Sirivadhanabhakdi after a protracted takeover battle, said it planned to list Frasers Centrepoint in the city-state by the end of the year.

Fraser and Neave (F&N), the Singapore-based property-to-drinks conglomerate, has become the latest company to attempt a spin-off of a property arm.
The group, bought this year by Thai billionaire Charoen Sirivadhanabhakdi after a protracted takeover battle, said it planned to list Frasers Centrepoint (FC) in the city-state by the end of the year.

F&N shareholders will receive two FC shares for every F&N share owned, leaving the property division as a separately listed entity.
The move, subject to shareholder and regulatory approval, is part of efforts by TCC, the Thai conglomerate controlled by Charoen, to focus on F&N’s food and beverage business. TCC owns 61.59 per cent of F&N.

F&N also said it is considering a Reit of its hospitality assets.
“The listing will enable us to pursue our growth strategies independently. In addition to Singapore, China and Australia are core markets for [FC] and we will continue to focus on the residential and commercial property development sectors there,” said Lim Ee Seng, chief executive of FC.

The move follows a recent trend of companies listing their property interests to unlock value in the assets.
Fantasia, a Chinese property developer, said it would spin off certain assets in a separate listing, while Great Eagle Holdings listed three Hong Kong hotels through a business trust-type vehicle at the end of May.

Also, Hong Kong property developer and infrastructure company Hopewell Holdings tried to spin off its Hong Kong property business via an IPO in early June. Hopewell was, however, forced to call the deal off due to a lack of demand.

Source: FinanceAsia

 

Thai Tycoon May Hold Property IPO in Singapore

Fraser & Neave Seeks to Monetize Assets


SINGAPORE—Thai billionaire Charoen Sirivadhanabhakdi is considering a Singapore listing of some of the real-estate assets owned by Fraser & Neave Ltd.,
the conglomerate he bought earlier this year in one of Asia's biggest debt-fueled takeovers.
Fraser & Neave, of which Mr. Charoen owns more than 90%, said in a statement that it is considering an initial public offering of its hospitality assets to monetize their value. It didn't mention the size or timing of the IPO but people with knowledge of the deal said it could raise around US$1 billion and would likely be held early next year.
Separately, Fraser & Neave said it will spin off its property arm, Frasers Centrepoint Ltd., and list it on Singapore Exchange  by the end of this year following a dividend in specie, meaning without conducting any capital-raising.
If he proceeds with the IPO of the hospitality assets, Mr. Charoen will try to capitalize on strong demand for shares in Singapore real-estate trust offerings this year but could also face a more challenging market environment.
Singapore has become a hub for trust listings in Asia, due largely to government rules that require trusts to pay out 90% of revenue in dividends. Singapore-listed REITs have yields of 6%-7%.
Among the big deals, Mapletree Greater China Commercial Trust  raised US$1.3 billion in an IPO of China real-estate assets in March.
Just last month, Singapore-listed property developer Overseas Union Enterprises raised US$476 million in an IPO of hotel and shopping mall assets, and Singapore Press Holdings Pte., the city-state's largest publishing company, raised US$438 million in an offering of its shopping malls. Demand for both offerings easily exceeded the supply of shares.
But global sentiment toward emerging markets has soured in recent months, and many stock markets in Southeast Asia have been hit hard as investors pull their money in anticipation of the U.S. Federal Reserve beginning to wind down its monetary stimulus.
Singapore's benchmark Straits Times Index on Tuesday fell to its lowest level since November.
Two people with knowledge of Mr. Charoen's plans said Fraser & Neave is still choosing which assets it would place in the REIT.
DBS Bank, which was one of the main lenders for Mr. Charoen's acquisition of Fraser & Neave, has been appointed to advise on the REIT IPO, according to people with knowledge of the deal. More banks are likely to be added at a later stage, one of the people said.
Separately, Fraser & Neave confirmed Tuesday that it will spin off its property business, Frasers Centerpoint, following a strategic review of its operations.
The company said it would conduct a dividend in specie, offering current Fraser & Neave shareholders two shares of Frasers Centrepoint for every share of Fraser & Neave they own. It would list Frasers Centrepoint on the Singapore Exchange by end of this year by way of "introduction," which would mean that there will be no fundraising.
Frasers Centrepoint's assets include shopping malls, serviced apartments, residential developments and office blocks in places including China, Australia and Thailand.
DBS Bank, Morgan Stanley  and United Overseas Bank advised Mr. Charoen on separating the property business, people with knowledge of this deal said.
Mr. Charoen started buying up shares in Fraser & Neave, which is more than 130 years old, in July last year, at which time the company also had a brewing business and was selling Tiger beer.
Mr. Charoen's interest in the company prompted Fraser & Neave's Dutch joint-venture partner, Heineken NV,  to bid for the brewing business, which it acquired late last year for US$4.6 billion.
The Thai tycoon then acquired the rest of Fraser & Neave after a months-long takeover battle against Overseas Union Enterprise.
Mr. Charoen's acquisition of Fraser & Neave valued the Singapore company at US$11.2 billion. It was largely paid for with debt.

Source: The Wall Street Journal

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Tencent denies report of Singapore IPO for WeChat spin-off

Tencent Holdings Ltd, China's leading Internet firm by revenue, on Tuesday denied a newspaper report that it plans to list its popular Weixin, or WeChat, mobile messaging app as a spin-off company in Singapore.



Citing an unnamed source, the China Daily earlier reported that Hong Kong-listed Tencent opened an office in Singapore to deal with a listing, which it originally planned to hold in Hong Kong. The report gave no timeframe or other listing details.
"This market news is not true," said Jerry Huang, a spokesman for Tencent.


Tencent, led by CEO and Chairman Pony Ma and more than 30 percent owned by South African media group Naspers Ltd, is due to announce second-quarter earnings on Wednesday.

The company has invested heavily in WeChat as it and other Chinese Internet companies such as Alibaba Group and Baidu Inc try to broaden their revenue streams.
With more than 300 million users in China, WeChat - which is similar to WhatsApp and South Korean firm Kakao Inc's KakaoTalk - has strong potential earnings power for Tencent, which is looking to monetize the app. It last week released an updated app introducing games, paid-for emoticons and a mobile payment system.

Shares in Tencent, valued at $88 billion, rose as much as 1.5 percent in early trade, but by the midsession were trading down 0.05 percent at HK$367.20. The broader Hang Seng index was up 0.7 percent.

Source: Reuter


Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Soilbuild Reit to price IPO on Singapore Exchange at low end


Soilbuild Reit to price IPO on Singapore Exchange at low end

REUTERS - Singapore's Soilbuild Business Space Reit is set to price its $457 million stock market listing at the lower end of its indicative price range, Thomson Reuters publication IFR reported.
Sponsored by property developer Soilbuild Group Holdings, the Reit is expected to price its initial public offering (IPO) at $0.78, from the $0.77-S$0.80 range it had flagged previously, IFR said.
Soilbuild Reit will hold a media briefing on Wednesday to announce the pricing. A spokesman for Soilbuild declined comment on the pricing.
The Reit, which owns seven business and industrial properties in Singapore, has offered 586.5 million units. Based on the indicative price range, the company was offering a yield of 7.3-7.6 per cent for 2013 and 7.5-7.8 per cent for 2014.

Source: Straits Times

Monday, August 5, 2013

Soilbuild kicks off $371 million IPO; Deltamas delays pricing

The Singapore-based business space Reit goes ahead without cornerstones but is covered at the top after the first three days. Meanwhile, Indonesian industrial estate owner Deltamas is trying to restructure its IPO after demand falls short.

 At first glance, the launch of yet another real estate investment trust (Reit) IPO in Singapore this past week is encouraging as it suggests that improving equity markets are giving issuers the confidence to push ahead with their listing plans.

But, the offering of up to S$469.2 million ($371 million) by Soilbuild Business Space Reit also highlights that there is still a lot of uncertainty about the short- to medium-term outlook for regional markets.

For one, Soilbuild has not been able to secure any cornerstone investors ahead of the launch. According to a source, investors aren’t staying away altogether, but they are reluctant for their involvement to be disclosed in the prospectus at a time when markets are still very volatile and turnover is at a low due to the summer holidays.

Many of the potential cornerstones did agree to participate in the deal as anchor investors instead, the source said. In fact, the 85.1% placement tranche was basically covered before launch and the response on the first day of bookbuilding (last Wednesday) was enough to push the order amount above the total deal size, he said. By late Friday, the interest had picked up a notch, with sources saying the deal is now covered at the top of the price range as well.

One reason why investors prefer to come in as anchors could be that they want to retain the flexibility to sell part of their positions without alarming the market should the stock trade down in the aftermarket. Since Singapore imposes no lock-ups on cornerstone investors, they too are free to sell their IPO shares at any time. However, cornerstones are disclosed in the listing prospectus while anchors are not, and there is always a risk that other investors could view it as negative if a known cornerstone chooses to sell early.

But perhaps more importantly, cornerstones also have to commit to buy the shares, or in the case of Soilbuild, the units, at any price within the price range. Anchor investors can usually set limits, which means they are a bit more flexible if sector valuations were to deteriorate during the marketing. Unlike cornerstones, anchors are, however, not guaranteed a specific allocation, which could become an issue if demand is high.

The second issue pointing to the lingering uncertainty is the fact that bankers once again seem to feel there is a need to line up buyers for almost the entire deal before they open the order books. Last year, the portion of IPOs that was “pre-placed” with cornerstones and anchors kept getting bigger and bigger as the market became more challenging and the practice has continued this year — especially for smaller deals that are not a must-own.

The challenges of bringing new and untested names to the market were highlighted on Friday when industrial estate developer Puradelta Lestari was forced to postpone the pricing of its IPO in Indonesia after a sharp decline in the valuation of its closest comparables. Together with further weakness in the rupiah this led to muted demand and a push back on the indicated pricing.

Puradelta, also known as Deltamas after the name of its industrial estate, hasn’t pulled the deal, but according to sources, it will try to see if it can find enough demand if it reduces the deal size and the price. If so, the IPO may be re-launched with new terms next week. Indonesia is on holiday this entire week to celebrate the end of Ramadan. The company was trying to raise between Rp1.569 trillion and Rp1.952 trillion ($154 million to $191 million) and was already offering its shares at a 60% discount to net asset value (NAV).
The difficulties facing Deltamas aren’t deterring other listing candidates from approaching the market, however. Not even in Indonesia. In addition to the launch of Soilbuild’s Reit IPO in Singapore, bankers also started investor education of Indonesian healthcare provider Siloam Hospital last Monday.
Depending on the investor feedback, the IPO may launch in mid-August. Siloam, which is 100% owned by Indonesia’s Lippo group, is seeking to raise about $200 million to $250 million. Credit Suisse, Goldman Sachs and domestic investment bank Ciptadana are joint bookrunners.

Soilbuild Business Space Reit
Soilbuild has seven assets in its initial portfolio — two business parks and five industrial properties. Business parks are made up of properties that are mainly used for offices, while industrial properties include factories, ramp-up facilities and other properties used primarily for manufacturing, engineering, logistics, warehousing and research and development.
The Soilbuild brand is well-known in Singapore and the sponsor, Soilbuild Group Holdings, is active throughout the property industry, from construction and development to leasing and fund management.

The Reit is looking to raise between S$451.6 million and S$469.2 million ($357 million to $371 million) from the sale of about 586.532 million new units (73% of the trust) to public investors. The remaining 27% will be bought by Lim Chap Huat, who is a co-founder of the sponsor and a director of the Reit management company.

The majority of the public shares, or 85.1%, will be offered to institutional investors, while 14.9% of the deal will be set aside for retail investors, the management, employees and business associates of the sponsor.

The units are offered at price between S$0.77 and S$0.80, which translates into an estimated dividend yield of 7.5% to 7.8% for the 2014 calendar year. The yield is pretty clean, except for the fact that the Reit management company will receive its fees in units for 2013 and 2014. One source noted that this has helped lift the yield from the mid-6% range, in response to the investor feedback.

The demand for a higher yield reflects the fact that the yield on the Singapore 10-year government bond has widened by about 80bp since the start of pre-marketing.
The current range puts Soilbuild at a slight premium (in yield terms) to Mapletree Industrial Trust and AIMS AMP Capital Industrial Reit, which sources say are the closest comps. However, analysts argue that because of its greater exposure to business parks (about 40% of its total portfolio value), Soilbuild should actually trade at a tighter yield than the other two.
One reason is that business parks have a larger and more diversified pool of tenants. Mapletree Industrial Trust, which has about 20% of its portfolio in business parks, is currently trading at a 7.1% yield for the fiscal year to March 2015, while AIMS AMP Reit is offering a yield of 7.4% for the same business year.

Singapore-listed Reits that focus almost exclusively on industrial properties, such as Cache Logistics, Cambridge Industrial Trust and the Sabana Shari’ah Compliant Reit, are trading at forward yields of around 7.5% to 8%, Bloomberg data show.
Soilbuild also comes with an overallotment option of 87.5 million secondary units that will be provided by Lim if the demand in the aftermarket is strong enough. The option accounts for 9.6% of the base deal and could increase the total proceeds to as much as S$539.2 million ($424 million). If exercised in full, the free-float will increase to 80%, while the portion held by Lim will drop to 20% from 27%.

The institutional bookbuilding will end tomorrow with the price expected to be fixed shortly afterwards. The retail offering will follow on August 7 to 14 and the trading debut is scheduled for August 16.
Interestingly, the bookrunners — Citi, DBS and DBS — have chosen not to actively market the deal outside of Asia and the management will only visit Singapore and Hong Kong.

Puradelta Lestari (Deltamas)
The industrial estate developer was looking to sell 15% of its share capital, but can reduce that to 10% and still meet the minimum free-float required by the Indonesian regulators. However, after its closest comp, Bekasi Fajar Industrial Estate, fell 16.4% during the six-day bookbuilding, sources said the offering price will need to be revised down as well.
Some international investors have apparently shown interest at a lower price, but the question is how low the seller is willing to go. It had already reduced the size from an initial aim to raise about $300 million to the $154 million that it sought from investors at the bottom of the price range.

The company needs money to fund the basic infrastructure, such as roads, electricity and water, as well as residential housing, parks and other common facilities on the Kota Deltamas estate before selling land to various industries for development into factories.
If it isn’t able to complete the IPO at this time, it will likely have to seek alternative types of funding. That is probably also why it was so keen to go ahead with the IPO even though the response during the investor education was pretty mixed.

International investors were said to have been positive with regard to the underlying assets, but were asking for a sizeable discount versus other similar industrial estate developers, including Bekasi Fajar. They were also concerned about the sharp drop in the rupiah, which is making investments into Indonesia more costly, while also eating into any potential returns.

Citi, Macquarie and Nomura are joint international bookrunners for the Deltamas IPO, while Macquarie and Sinarmas Sekuritas are joint domestic underwriters.

Source: FinanceAsia 

‘Snowpiercer’ Backer Spackman Seeks Singapore IPO

HK film investor to bolster capital for stakes, acquisitions

HONG KONG — Canadian-backed Korean film investor Spackman Entertainment Group is to seek a stock-market listing in Singapore.

The company has appointed Singapore investment firm PrimePartners Corporate Finance as advisor in the run up to the flotation on Singapore’s Catalist sponsor-supervised board.
Spackman Entertainment is a Hong Kong-based subsidiary of Toronto-listed Spackman Equities Group. It owns two South Korean film production firms, Zip Cinema and Opus Pictures.

Zip is producer of “Cold Eyes” a hit thriller that is currently on release and has scored over 4.5 million ticket sales at the Korean box office. Opus is a minority investor in “Snowpiercer” the English-language debut film of Bong Joon-ho which opened this week and sold over 1 million tickets before the weekend.

Spackman has not disclosed how much it intends to raise, but says that the proceeds of the sale are to be invested in expanding the two Korean companies’ production and investment slates as well as allowing it to pursue further acquisitions.

Source: Variety.com 


Thursday, August 1, 2013

REIT Listings Heat Up Singapore IPO Market

REIT Listings Heat Up Singapore IPO Market 

Companies are again rushing to list real estate and other assets on Singapore’s stock exchange, with billions of dollars in recent and planned deals putting the city-state on track for its best-ever year for initial public offerings.

They are listing in the form of trusts, which investors find attractive because they pay high returns and assured dividends. The new push follows a market selloff in May and June that hammered trusts’ share prices and led two companies to delay offerings.
In the past two weeks, two real-estate investment trusts raised a total of US$900 million in Singapore IPOs. Another US$4 billion of trust deals are in the pipeline as companies ranging from department-store operators to wind-power providers look to capitalize on the market’s recovery.

Last week, Singapore-listed property developer Overseas Union Enterprises, controlled by Indonesia’s Riady family, listed hotel and shopping-mall assets in a REIT after raising US$476 million in an IPO. And Singapore Press Holdings Pte. Ltd.  the city-state’s largest publishing company, listed a REIT of its shopping malls after raising US$438 million. Demand for both offerings, from institutional and retail investors, easily exceeded the supply of shares.

Other companies are following suit. Among them, Lotte Department Store, South Korea’s largest department-store operator by revenue, plans to list some of its shopping-mall assets in Singapore in a deal that could raise US$1 billion, people with knowledge of the deal said last week.

Lotte on Wednesday confirmed its IPO plan but said it hadn’t decided on the timing.
MBK Partners, an Asia-focused private-equity firm that controls Taiwan’s largest cable-television operator, China Network Systems, will also seek to raise around US$1 billion by listing the operator as a business trust, people with knowledge of the deal said last week.
MBK declined to comment Wednesday.

Singapore-listed property developer Soilbuild Construction Group Ltd., meanwhile, has started taking orders from institutional investors for a US$505 million IPO of industrial properties, people with knowledge of the deal said. The company filed an IPO prospectus with Singapore’s central bank on Tuesday.

The success of last week’s listings—shares in both traded above their IPO price on Wednesday—indicates that many investors still see REITs as attractive despite concerns about U.S. monetary stimulus potentially being scaled back and about higher interest rates, which were largely behind the selloff in May and June.

REITs were the biggest losers on the Singapore market during that period, falling 15% from May 20 through July 4 and underperforming the benchmark Straits Times Index, Citibank said in a report.
But despite higher yields on Singapore government bonds, the gap between them and yields on Singapore-listed REITs remains “quite comfortable and attractive,” said Eric Khaw, Singapore-based associate fund manager for Henderson Global Investors, which has more than US$100 billion under management.

“We are not that concerned about short-term interest rates moving up in the short to medium term,” Khaw said.
Henderson was a cornerstone investor in Mapletree Greater China Commercial Trust, which raised US$1.3 billion in an IPO of China real-estate assets in March. Cornerstone investors generally commit to holding a significant stake for a set period.

Singapore has become an Asian hub for trust listings, due largely to government rules that require trusts to pay out 90% of revenue in dividends. Singapore-listed REITs have yields of 6%-7%.
The city-state ranks first in Asia this year in trust IPOs with a total volume of US$3.4 billion, nearly half the region’s total, according to data provider Dealogic.
That dominance in trust listings, which has accounted for 90% of the city-state’s total IPO volume this year, has pushed Singapore to first in overall IPO volume in Southeast Asia for the year—and third in Asia behind only Tokyo and Hong Kong, according to Dealogic.
If all the deals in the pipeline get done, Singapore is likely to surpass its previous record for IPO volume of US$7.2 billion in 2011.

“There is ample liquidity in the region and property is a good way to play on the growth in Asian economies,” said Angelo Scasserra, head of real-estate banking for Southeast Asia at Credit Suisse, an adviser on both the Overseas Union and Singapore Press Holdings offerings.
Scasserra said both offerings saw significant demand from private-banking clients.
“Unlike an institutional investor, a private-banking client doesn’t have to manage redemptions from fund investors and they don’t have to outperform indices, so they can be long-term holders of real-estate securities,” he said.

Source: The Wall Street Journal