The Philippine Star

Bounty Agro mulls iPO

- By IRIS GONZALES

Bounty Agro Ventures, Inc., which is part of the Bounty Fresh Group of Companies, may consider an initial public offering (IPO) as one of several options to create the best value for the company, according to its chairman Tennyson Chen.

“As part of prudent fiscal planning, we are always on the lookout for opportunit­ies to improve and maximize shareholde­r value and there’s a variety of options, that may or may not include an IPO, depending on various factors over which we do not have any control,” Chen said.

The poultry firm is said to be exploring an IPO that may raise $400 million to $500 million, according to a Bloomberg report.

The report said the company is having discussion­s with potential advisers on its planned listing.

A first-time share sale could take place as early as the end of this year but deliberati­ons are at an “early stage and Bounty could still opt not to proceed with the offering,” Bloomberg said.

Bounty Fresh was founded in the 1980s by Chen who started the business in a one-layer house in Sta. Maria, Bulacan, with an initial 5,000 heads of chicken.

From a 5,000-head layer farm, the business grew to be one of the largest broiler integrator­s in the country.

Today, it is the only fully-integrated poultry company that has continuous­ly invested in company-owned facilities.

These include Grand Parent farm, Parent Stock farm, hatcheries, dressing plants, feed mills, and cool-cell broiler complexes in the Philippine­s.

Bounty Agro is the first company in the Philippine­s to put up a single-stage commercial broiler hatchery, a technology that ensures better hatchery sanitation with controlled ventilatio­n that will in turn produce better chick quality.

To cater to the consumers in the various regions and islands of the archipelag­o, Bounty Agro Ventures Inc. (BAVI) was integrated to operate in several branches across the country.

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