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Malaysia Airports shareholder expresses doubt on takeover bid

    • Analysts have mostly recommended that investors accept the buyout offer.
    • Analysts have mostly recommended that investors accept the buyout offer. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG
    Published Tue, May 21, 2024 · 07:53 AM

    NORTHCAPE Capital said a bid by major shareholders to take Malaysia Airports Holdings private may face opposition due to the low valuation offered.

    “They might need to revise the offer,” said Ross Cameron, a portfolio manager at Northcape, which own a 1.7 per cent stake in the airport group. “This offer was opportunistic,” and there is a risk the stakeholders won’t get the 90 per cent threshold needed to delist the company, he said.

    A Khazanah Nasional-led consortium announced on May 15 an offer for the shares of Malaysia Airports it does not already own, at RM11 apiece. The move comes as revised concession terms and extended operating agreements provide better earnings visibility for the airports operator.

    The offer, made along with the Employees Provident Fund, Global Infrastructure Partners and Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, values the company at RM18.4 billion (S$5.3 billion). Shares of Malaysia Airports have dropped about 3 per cent since May 14, just before the offer was announced, paring year-to-date gains to 37 per cent.

    Northcape is an Australian boutique fund manager specialising in equities with funds under management of about US$8 billion, according to its website. The fund is active in the aviation sector and owns stakes in Qantas Airways and an airport in Mexico, Cameron said. It used to hold shares in the now delisted Sydney Airport.

    Analysts have mostly recommended that investors accept the buyout offer. The deal is fairly valued, given that Malaysia Airports’ share price has advanced in the last six months as minority shareholders “positioned early”, said Macquarie Capital Securities analyst Max Koh.

    Some may opt to hold out for a better price. Among recent transactions in the region involving infrastructure assets, the US$17 billion sale of Sydney Airport in 2021 was only completed after two previous bids were rejected.

    “The transaction would materialise eventually,” said Mohit Mirpuri, a fund manager at Singapore-based SGMC Capital. “It may just take longer than they anticipated.” BLOOMBERG

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