EQT in $2.26 Billion Takeover Bid for Australia's Vocus
May 26 2019 - 7:57PM
Dow Jones News
By Robb M. Stewart
MELBOURNE, Australia--Asset manager EQT has secured access to
Vocus Group Ltd.'s (VOC.AU) books after pitching a non-binding
takeover offer that values the Australian telecommunications
provider at about 3.27 billion Australian dollars (US$2.26
billion).
In a statement Monday, Vocus said EQT Infrastructure is offering
A$5.25 a share in cash, a 35% premium to the last closing price on
Friday.
The indicative bid is subject to a number of conditions,
including securing committed financing and the unanimous approval
of Vocus's board, plus the usual shareholder and regulatory
approvals.
Vocus's board said it had decided to allow EQT non-exclusive due
diligence access to allow it to potentially make a formal binding
offer for the Australian company, a process expected to take a
number of weeks. Vocus has hired UBS as its financial adviser.
A takeover of Vocus would further shake up Australia's telecom
industry, which has struggled in recent years with heightened
competition and the ongoing rollout by the federal government of a
nationwide broadband network that sells wholesale access to telecom
operators. TPG Telecom Ltd. (TPM.AU) and Vodafone Hutchison
Australia have proposed merging their respective fixed-line and
mobile operations, but are seeking approval in court after the deal
was earlier this month blocked by Australia's antitrust
regulator.
In late 2017, competing private equity firms KKR & Co. and
Affinity Equity Partners ended talks with Vocus after finding they
couldn't support a takeover offer on terms that were acceptable to
the telecom company's board. The company had attracted an
indicative offer from KKR months earlier worth about A$2.18
billion, and a month later Affinity made a bid at a matching
price.
Vocus owns telecommunications networks in capital and regional
cities in Australia and New Zealand, with a portfolio of brands
focused on a range of corporate, small business, government and
residential customers. Over the last couple of years, the company
has shifted from a concentration on fiber-networks on Australia's
east coast to a broader range of telecom operations across the two
countries, other products including television and insurance
services and retailing electricity and natural gas.
In February, Vocus parted ways with Geoff Horth, who had been
chief executive since February 2016 when the company completed the
acquisition of another telecom company, M2 Group. The departure of
Mr. Horth came a week after Vocus scaled back earnings guidance due
to higher expense charges and lower-than-anticipated subscribers
for the telecommunications company's retail energy offering.
Following media reports in March, the company denied it had
current plans for a capital raising with the issue of equity and
said the board was comfortable with the debt position. And in
April, the company said it had opted against selling its New
Zealand business after failing to land an offer it could
accept.
EQT, a global alternative asset manager supported in part by
Investor AB, last week said its EQT Infrastructure IV had signed an
agreement to acquire Melita, a telecom operator in Malta. In March,
closed its largest infrastructure fund yet, after it EQT
Infrastructure IV held a one-and-done close at EUR9 billion
(US$10.7 billion) after an about six-month fundraising process.
Write to Robb M. Stewart at robb.stewart@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 26, 2019 20:42 ET (00:42 GMT)
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