Sunningdale to delist after scheme scrapes through with 51.2% of shareholders present in favour

Sharanya Pillai
Published Fri, Feb 19, 2021 · 05:42 PM

SOME 51.2 per cent of Sunningdale Tech scheme shareholders present at Friday's scheme meeting voted yes to take the mainboard-listed company private. This is just slightly over the 50 per cent threshold required for the scheme to pass.

In addition, 90.3 per cent of the scheme shares represented by votes by proxy was cast in favour of the scheme. This was comfortably above the 75 per cent threshold needed, fulfilling the second criteria for the scheme to be approved.

With the scheme to take Sunningdale private approved at the meeting, the mainboard-listed company is expected to last trade on March 8, and delist on April 20, Sunningdale said in a Friday bourse filing.

The firm will next be submitting its application to the court to sanction the scheme. It expects the court to hear the matter on March 1.

The vote outcome caps a closely-watched tussle between Sunningdale's offeror and investors who had felt that the original offer price was too low.

In November last year, Sunningdale's chairman Koh Boon Hwee and private equity player Novo Tellus PE Fund 2 announced that they were teaming up to take Sunningdale private at S$1.55 in cash per share via the scheme of arrangement.

GET BT IN YOUR INBOX DAILY

Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.

VIEW ALL

However, activist investor Quarz Capital Management issued an open statement that the price was "too low" and "significantly undervalues" the firm. The offeror later raised the takeover price to S$1.65 per scheme share, up 6.5 per cent.

Subsequently, on Feb 17, Quarz pared down its stake from 8.023 per cent to 7.987 per cent, selling 69,000 shares at S$1.63 apiece. Quarz told BT then that it was "reallocating" its portfolio and focusing on companies that could benefit the most as the pandemic impact subsides.

Shares of Sunningdale last traded at S$1.64 before a trading halt was called on Friday morning.

KEYWORDS IN THIS ARTICLE

BT is now on Telegram!

For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to  t.me/BizTimes

Companies & Markets

SUPPORT SOUTH-EAST ASIA'S LEADING FINANCIAL DAILY

Get the latest coverage and full access to all BT premium content.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Browse corporate subscription here