Bangkok Post

HK cash fleeing? Not around here

- NISHA GOPALAN Nisha Gopalan is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering deals and banking. She previously worked for the Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones.

Hong Kong may have been seeing money flow out as the city’s turmoil undermines its reputation as a stable financial centre, but one important source of capital keeps on coming: cash for initial public offerings.

The city has hosted two IPOs of more than US$1 billion (30.2 billion baht) since early June and ESR Cayman Ltd is testing investor appetite for a revived share sale of as much as $1.45 billion. The Hong Kong-based warehouse operator, which is backed by Warburg Pincus and Goldman Sachs Group Inc, delayed its IPO in June citing unfavourab­le market conditions. It has now increased its fundraisin­g target from $1.24 billion.

ESR is the second company to resuscitat­e a flotation since June, when largescale protests started to affect Hong Kong.

Budweiser Brewing Company APAC Ltd completed a $5 billion offering last month, having shelved its sale in July amid lacklustre demand. The Asian unit of AnheuserBu­sch InBev NV almost halved the size of the IPO from a planned $9.8 billion. The stock has risen 15% since it started trading at the end of September.

While Hong Kong has slipped from being the world’s largest IPO venue last year, it’s still running in third place in 2019 behind the Nasdaq and New York exchanges, with companies having raised $18.6 billion in the city, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That testifies to Hong Kong’s enduring strength as a capital-raising hub, an advantage that won’t easily be prized away by any regional rival.

The bottom line for companies such as ESR is that they have few other choices. Hong Kong has Asia’s deepest stock market bar Tokyo, where investors are mostly domestical­ly focused and few foreign companies opt to list. Singapore, meanwhile, has been bedeviled by a lack of liquidity. The city’s market capitalisa­tion has shrunk to $478 billion — smaller than Thailand’s and less than a 10th of Hong Kong’s $5.2 trillion.

Hong Kong-traded Fortune Real Estate Investment Trust withdrew its dual listing from Singapore’s main board in June, citing costs of compliance and low trading volumes, one of a number of companies to have abandoned the exchange. Singapore is the world’s 12th largest venue globally for IPOs this year, behind even Borsa Italiana and SIX Swiss Exchange. Even well-known Singapore names have been looking to sell shares elsewhere: PropertyGu­ru Ltd, an online real estate classified­s business backed by KKR & Co and TPG Capital, had been looking to list in Australia, before withdrawin­g an expected $260 million IPO on Wednesday.

A mild recovery in Hong Kong share prices has given companies confidence to venture back, with the benchmark Hang Seng Index climbing about 5% from its August low. And positive post-IPO performanc­es are helping to bolster investor interest. Besides Budweiser, Chinese sportswear retailer Topsports Internatio­nal Holdings Ltd has climbed 15% since raising $1 billion this month.

A peculiarit­y of the Hong Kong market has also aided the return of Budweiser and ESR: the cornerston­e investor. Budweiser sold a $1 billion stake to Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund, while Canadian pension fund OMERS has committed $585 million to ESR’s offering. First time around, neither company had cornerston­es — big investors that commit to hold the shares for a minimum period, signalling confidence to other buyers.

ESR, which has logistics assets in countries from China to India, is seeking to sell stock at a premium to its bigger, Australian­listed competitor Goodman Group. At the bottom of its targeted price range, ESR is priced at 26.1 times its estimated 2020 enterprise value to Ebitda, according to Aequitas Research analyst Sumeet Singh, who writes on Smartkarma. Goodman is trading on a ratio of 21.8 times, according to Bloomberg-compiled data.

That looks ambitious, though it may reflect the return of more buoyant conditions to the Hong Kong market. A successful sale is likely to encourage more listing candidates to tiptoe back.

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