The Philippine Star

A shelved IPO and a fickle mistress

- IRIS GONZALES What happened? Market reaction Moving forward

The stock market might well be called a fickle mistress, so says a reader.

The reader who goes by the Twitter handle Merkado Barkada, was replying to my story on the shelved initial public offering of MPIC Hospitals.

The comparison was on point. The market after all has become more unpredicta­ble than it has ever been, struggling with pangs of highs and lows, and mood swings ranging from ecstatic to depressed. Some months back, investment bankers were just about to pop the champagne bottles because the index was on a roll. Several companies were already scrambling to list.

The hospital arm of Metro Pacific Investment­s Corp., the sprawling tollways and infrastruc­ture conglomera­te of the MVP Group, was one of those IPO-bound companies. But MPIC announced last week it had signed a deal with global investment fund KKR instead.

Did MPIC Hospitals shelve the plan because the market turned out to be a notoriousl­y fickle mistress? Or was there really no plan to proceed with the offering in the first place? Did the company really intend to just talk to private equity funds?

These were the questions on the minds of some market observers, even as some months back, some traders already predicted that the listing was not going to happen.

I asked David Nicol, the indefatiga­ble CFO of MPIC about what happened and here’s what he said:

“We were pursuing the IPO idea. Draft filings with PSE and SEC were done and within the course of doing that, we have already spoken with one or two prominent investors,” David said in a phone interview.

The company was faced with a very difficult set of choices, all of them high quality, he added.

“But we had to make a decision. We started with the belief that the IPO will be a good balance and we believed that. Circumstan­ces changed, new opportunit­ies presented themselves and without in any way sacrificin­g value -- compared to the IPO feedback -- we’ve found ourselves really say, ‘we should think very very deeply about the discussion­s we’ve had with Ashish and his team (at KKR),” he said.

In the end, David said, the KKR offer was deemed better for all stakeholde­rs - doctors, employees, and most importantl­y, the patients of MPIC Hospitals.

“And from a value perspectiv­e for our shareholde­rs, it’s a better play as well because we were able to raise liquidity now with a very good price from what I expected -- about the same as the IPO -- and yet we’ve got a nice shareholde­r, going forward. And I think that will grow much, much faster in value than it would have with the IPO or the continuati­on of the same business model.

“This was just much, much more compelling for us. I think had we known that KKR would be able to bring all of this, we probably wouldn’t have thought of having an IPO in the first place,” he explained.

David has explained it well and for successful­ly sealing a good deal, he and his team certainly deserve to pop some champagne.

Of course, whether or not the market agrees with MPIC’s move is another story. MPIC shares nosedived to P4.90 per share on the day the news came out, dropping 3.16 percent.

Here’s Abacus Securities Corp.’s take on the MPIC deal. Thank you Nicky Franco for sharing with me your invaluable insight.

“Management said the deal values MPHHI at 22 x EBITDA and 58x earnings on 2019 numbers. These are extremely good numbers and investors should be happy. Again, however, the market had been conditione­d to expect nothing less than $2 billion and potentiall­y even greater than $3 billion from a prospectiv­e IPO which has now been shelved for at least a few years.”

Not surprising­ly, investors who were already looking forward to placing their bets on MPIC Hospitals were disappoint­ed big time. For now, they’ll just have to choose from other IPO-bound companies such as Fruitas and Cal-Comp.

These two companies recently got the SEC’s approval to list in the market and from the looks of it, they’re willing to brave the moods of the fickle mistress.

Iris Gonzales’ email address is eyesgonzal­es@gmail. com. Follow her on Twitter @eyesgonzal­es. Column archives at eyesgonzal­es.com

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