The Borneo Post (Sabah)

After year-long drought, two big M’sian IPOs set for second-quarter launch

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SINGAPORE/KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia’s poultry producer Leong Hup Internatio­nal and fast food operator QSR Brands are in advanced stages of launching their initial public offerings in the second quarter, which would revive the nation’s moribund primary market, sources said.

The IPOs, which were postponed last year due to weak markets, could together raise as much as US$900 million, the sources said, adding that the offerings could hit the market as early as April.

Total fundraisin­g from Malaysian IPOs plunged to US$170 million in 2018, the lowest in 20 years, and compared with US$1.8 billion raised in 2017, according to Refinitiv data.

“Internatio­nal investors have been generally underweigh­t on Malaysia, so there is definitely an interest to look at opportunit­ies,” said one banker.

Malaysian stocks took a beating in May after veteran leader Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad ousted the ruling coalition of more than six decades in the country’s elections, creating uncertaint­y over the new government’s policies. The benchmark stock index fell six per cent last year, in line with regional markets.

In response to a Reuters query, Leong Hup said it was in the midst of obtaining necessary regulatory approvals for the IPO.

QSR did not immediatel­y provide a response.

Leong Hup, which is majorityow­ned by the founding Lau family and counts PE firm Affinity Equity Partners as an investor, is in talks to finalize cornerston­e investors and set an indicative price band for its IPO, bankers said.

Both local and foreign funds are expected to take stakes in Leong Hup, another banker said.

QSR, the country’s biggest fast food chain, which counts the investment arm of Johor state and PE firm CVC among its investors, is also set to start negotiatio­ns with cornerston­e investors, the sources said.

Both companies, whose IPOs have been pending for more than a year, are in the process of submitting updated financial statements to the regulators, the sources added. — Reuters

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