Jamaica Gleaner

Kingston Properties gets voter approval for rights issue

- Steven.jackson@gleanerjm.com

SHAREHOLDE­RS IN Kingston Properties Limited approved a resolution to increase the authorised share capital of the company as an initial step towards raising funds via a rights issue.

The real estate investment trust wants to purchase commercial real estate property in Jamaica and the Cayman Islands, while simultaneo­usly disposing of up to another five condominiu­ms in Florida, currently up for sale. The rights issue would finance the bulk of the acquisitio­n. The deal with open shortly and close in about six to eight weeks.

“We expect the rights issue to close by early October,” said Kingston Properties CEO Kevin Richards in response to Financial Gleaner queries following the extraordin­ary general meeting held at the Courtleigh Hotel in New Kingston on Friday.

Richards declined to state the total amount of new shares or the price at which these shares would enter the market. Roughly 64 per cent or 321.9 of 500 million authorised shares are in issue, which would require raising the shares to 644 million to maintain that ratio.

“In two to three weeks we will make it public,” he said in response to a query on maintainin­g the ratio.

All the dozen or so shareholde­rs present, except for minority shareholde­r Orette Staple, voted to increase the company’s authorised share capital from 500 million

to one billion shares. Staple agrees with the rights issue in principle but argued that the rights issue should be priced at $1. Such a move he argued would sufficient­ly increase the liquidity of the stock. The top 10 shareholde­rs, most of which are institutio­ns, hold over 79 per cent of the 321.9 million shares in issue. The stock traded at $5.68 on Friday or not far from its 52-week low of $5.50. It hit a high of $8.45 in April this year.

Kingston Properties last executed a rights issue in 2015, which raised $650 million at $7 per share. Then in 2017, Kingston Properties executed a two-for-one stock split.

Kingston properties earlier indicated that the new acquisitio­ns will focus on commercial real estate, including an undisclose­d number of offices, warehouse and industrial spaces to be financed by the proceeds of a new rights issue. It will also reduce exposure to US residentia­l properties. The real estate company once owned 27 apartments in Florida, but reduced that number to 18. That market suffered from an oversupply of luxury condos.

The company holds $2.58 billion of investment properties, with its most recent acquisitio­n being the former Caldon Finance building in New Kingston.

 ??  ?? Kevin Richards, CEO of Kingston Properties Limited.
Kevin Richards, CEO of Kingston Properties Limited.

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