Wesfarmers Plans to Spin Off Coles Grocery Unit -- Update
March 16 2018 - 12:28AM
Dow Jones News
By Mike Cherney
SYDNEY-Australian conglomerate Wesfarmers Ltd. on Friday laid
out plans for the biggest spinoff in Australian corporate history:
a listing of its Coles supermarket chain with a potential value of
as much as US$15 billion.
Wesfarmers shares rose more than 6% after the announcement,
suggesting investors agreed it is a good time for the company to
reduce its grocery exposure after acquiring Coles in 2007.
Australia's supermarket sector, long dominated by Coles and chief
rival Woolworths Group Ltd., has attracted foreign competition from
German discount brand Aldi and others recently, and there is
speculation Amazon.com Inc. could eventually sell groceries
here.
The largest spinoff previously in Australia was in 2015 when BHP
Billiton Ltd. unloaded what is now South32 Ltd., and was valued at
about US$9 billion at the time, according to Dealogic.
Wesfarmers could retain a minority stake of up to 20% in Coles.
But the company said the spinoff would allow it to focus on
businesses that have more growth potential. Wesfarmers also owns
the Bunnings hardware chain, Target and Kmart discount department
stores, office-supply chain Officeworks, as well as coal-mine
assets and chemical and fertilizer businesses.
Managing Director Rob Scott told reporters on a conference call
that superior returns at Wesfarmers's other businesses "doesn't
mean the returns from Coles wouldn't be good returns, they just
will be more moderate." Since 2009, Coles has grown earnings before
income and tax at a 9.5% annual rate, though Wesfarmers has
invested eight billion Australian dollars (US$6.2 billion) into the
business over the years.
Wesfarmers said Coles would be a top-30 company listed on the
Australian Securities Exchange and that it expected the spinoff to
be completed in the 2019 financial year. Wesfarmers shareholders
will receive shares in Coles proportional to their existing
Wesfarmers holdings. The new company would include more than 800
supermarkets nationally, as well as liquor stores, Coles Express
convenience stores, a financial-services unit and hotel chain
Spirit Hotels.
The spinoff is still subject to shareholder and other approval,
and on a conference call with reporters, Mr. Scott said Wesfarmers
would be open to a bid for Coles from a private-equity firm or
other buyer. He didn't suggest, however, that a bid had been
received.
Daniel Mueller, a portfolio manager and analyst at Wesfarmers
shareholder Vertium Asset Management, said the spinoff is a "bit of
a masterstroke by management," saying Coles appears undervalued
compared with Woolworths.
Woolworths's market capitalization was A$34.5 billion as of
Thursday's close, compared with A$46.7 billion for Wesfarmers.
"We've always argued that Wesfarmers is very difficult to value
given the conglomerate nature of it," said Jun Bei Liu, deputy
portfolio manager at Tribeca Investment Partners, another
Wesfarmers shareholder. She said the spinoff is a pretty good
strategy move.
Coles, which counts for about a third of Wesfarmers's current
earnings, previously was the company's top earner, but was
overtaken by Bunnings in Australia and New Zealand in its recent
half-year result. Wesfarmers said the earnings decline at Coles in
the half year reflected costs from investing in the business during
the previous financial year, and that food and liquor revenue had
in fact increased.
Wesfarmers had been focusing lately on its retail chains,
agreeing in December to sell its Curragh coal mine to a U.S. coal
producer. Not all its retail forays have been a success. Wesfarmers
recently bought U.K. hardware chain Homebase and booked a major
write-down on that unit, now called Bunnings U.K. and Ireland, in
its half-year result last month. Mr. Scott told reporters that
spinning off Coles shouldn't affect the company's ability to absorb
weakness elsewhere, such as the Bunnings U.K. unit, which the
company has placed under review.
"The intent to demerge Coles has no bearing at all on what we
do" with Bunnings U.K., Mr. Scott said.
Also Friday, Wesfarmers said that Steven Cain would be the new
managing director of Coles, succeeding John Durkan, who will step
down later this year after 10 years in senior leadership positions
at the grocer. Mr. Cain is currently chief executive of
supermarkets and convenience at Metcash, which supplies the IGA
supermarket brand.
Write to Mike Cherney at mike.cherney@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
March 16, 2018 01:13 ET (05:13 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2018 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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