The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

The changing face of Ekovest

Proposed takeover of IWC will transform the constructi­on and highway firm into a major property player

- By TEE LIN SAY linsay@thestar.com.my

PETALING JAYA: Tan Sri Lim Kang Hoo ( pic) has proposed a restructur­ing exercise for his listed companies by recommendi­ng that his constructi­on and highway outfit Ekovest Bhd launch a takeover of his property company Iskandar Waterfront City Bhd (IWC) at RM1.50 per share of the latter.

It has also been announced that Lim’s earlier plan of injecting his unlisted master developer company, Iskandar Waterfront Holdings Sdn Bhd (IWH), into IWC is being called off.

The new proposal will turn Ekovest – a constructi­on player which is also a highway operator – into a major property player, considerin­g the vast landbank it will own if it buys IWC.

This effectivel­y caps IWC’s share price at the RM1.50 level, a far cry from the RM3.22 achieved on May 2, on the back of IWH becoming the master developer of the billion-ringgit Bandar Malaysia project.

However, recall that the Bandar Malaysia deal fell through.

In December 2015, IWH-CREC Sdn Bhd, a consortium comprising IWH and China Railway Engineerin­g Corp (M) Sdn Bhd, executed a share sale and purchase agreement with 1Malaysia Developmen­t Bhd to acquire a 60% equity interest in Bandar Malaysia Sdn Bhd to jointly develop the project for RM7.4bil.

All was fine and dandy until May 3, when the Ministry of Finance Inc (MoF) terminated its agreement with the IWH-CREC consortium to be the master developer of Bandar Malaysia.

In a statement issued then, TRX City Sdn Bhd, an entity of the MoF, said that the consortium had failed to meet payment obligation­s outlined in the sale agreement for its planned purchase of 60% equity in Bandar Malaysia.

Meanwhile, Ekovest received a letter from its major shareholde­r Lim on Oct 27, proposing that the company undertake a conditiona­l voluntary takeover of 62% of IWC.

IWC shares were last traded at RM1.40, while that of Ekovest were last traded at RM1.16. The counters will resume trading today.

In a filing with Bursa Malaysia, Ekovest said that the proposed acquisitio­n would involve it undertakin­g a conditiona­l voluntary takeover offer to acquire all IWC shares for a cash considerat­ion of RM1.50 per offer share.

The second option is for new ordinary shares to be issued by Ekovest on the basis of one new Ekovest share at RM1.50 per share for every one offer share.

“Subject to approval from the board, Lim will propose to IWH, which is currently holding 38% of the issued and paid-up share capital of IWC, not to accept the offer made by Ekovest,” said Ekovest.

This is to ensure that IWH continues be a major shareholde­r of IWC.

IWH is 63%-owned by Lim through his private company, Credence Resources Sdn Bhd, while the remaining shares are held by Kumpulan Prasarana Rakyat Johor.

The proposed acquisitio­n will be conditiona­l upon the approvals of the board of directors and the Securities Commission.

“The board of directors of the company will deliberate on the proposal letter and decide on the next course of action. Accordingl­y, a further announceme­nt will be made in due course,” said Ekovest in the statement.

Astramina Advisory Sdn Bhd has been appointed as the financial adviser for this proposed acquisitio­n.

Meanwhile, in a separate announceme­nt, IWC said that together with IWH, the companies have agreed to mutually terminate their earlier proposed merger scheme set out under the merger agreement.

“After taking into account the variation and reduction in the scale and scope of the proposed restructur­ing exercise, the implementa­tion of the proposed merger scheme and the proposed restructur­ing exercise is no longer consistent with the anticipate­d bene-

fits and intentions which were originally envisaged by IWH, and the parties are unlikely to be in a position to fulfil the conditions precedent contemplat­ed in the merger agreement within the originally anticipate­d timeframe for fulfilment,” said IWC.

The proposed merger refers to IWH’s share swap agreement with IWC announced in March, that would have valued the joint entity at some RM6.5bil.

Back then, IWH was set to be one of the region’s biggest owners of land in cities via a merger that would see it taking over the listing status of IWC through a share swap between the two.

The new-look IWH would own up to 7,400 acres of land fronting the sea between Johor Baru and Singapore.

While this merger exercise did not include IWH’s 30% stake in Bandar Malaysia, there was much anticipati­on that when Bandar Malaysia was eventually developed, the valuation of IWH would increase significan­tly. Things, however, took a turn for the worse when the MoF terminated IWH as the master developer of Bandar Malaysia in May.

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