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FUELLED BY $2bn WAR CHEST, NMC EYES MORE PROFIT IN 2018

▶ Company is targeting exponentia­l growth and new acquisitio­ns, says chairman B R Shetty

- SARAH TOWNSEND

NMC Health, which joined the UK’s FTSE 100 list of companies with the highest market capitalisa­tion last September, has $2 billion (Dh7.34bn) of funding available for investment­s and acquisitio­ns in the coming years, and expects another profitable year in 2018 as it expands its operations globally, its chairman said.

NMC is in negotiatio­ns with several parties and expects deals to be announced before the end of the year. Africa is a “good opportunit­y”, BR Shetty, who is also the founder of NMC Health, told The National, as are Turkey, Europe, America, and the UK – which NMC hopes to enter by 2019.

“I have $2bn at my disposal to acquire companies as and when we can get them,” he said. “For the want of money we will not eject anybody. We are waiting for a good chance.”

The company prefers to acquire “running hospitals that require funding and our assistance, for example through a management contract”, rather than greenfield projects – building a new hospital from scratch, which takes a long time, he said. The company will also manage the new hospital under constructi­on at Reem Island in Abu Dhabi and a Fujairah hospital, both owned by Dr Shetty’s private investment vehicle, BRS Ventures.

NMC Health reported a 38 per cent annual rise in net profit to $209.2 million in 2017, and 2018 will be another strong year as it continues to grow its portfolio, Mr Shetty said. He declined to provide detailed forecasts, as the company is listed on the London Stock Exchange.

It has a market capitalisa­tion of almost $9.5bn.

“I can say exponentia­l growth will be there. There is no way growth will come down because we are building, brick by brick,” the chairman said, referring to the healthcare provider’s $600m-plus acquisitio­n spree in 2017.

It has continued to purchase assets this year, including controllin­g stakes in two GCC healthcare operators, the UAE’s CosmeSurge and Riyadh-based Al Salam Medical Group, for a total $207m.

This month, NMC signed a non-binding agreement with Hassana Investment Company, a unit of the General Organisati­on for Social Insurance, Saudi Arabia’s biggest pension fund, to form a joint venture providing healthcare facilities including up to 1,489 hospital beds in Riyadh and secondary Saudi cities. NMC would own a majority stake in the new company under the proposed asset swap deal, which has yet to complete, it said in a statement on June 11.

Demand for health care in the Middle East and North Africa is rising due to a rapidly expanding population.

The region is forecast to need 470,000 additional hospital beds in the next four years to keep up with minimum per-capita requiremen­ts set by the OECD, a JLL report said last year – equating to 3,130 new hospitals over the period.

In Saudi Arabia, efforts to boost public-private partnershi­ps are set to create significan­t opportunit­ies for investment in health care.

The kingdom’s 2020 National Transforma­tion Plan has set targets for the healthcare sector such as increasing private healthcare spend to 35 per cent from 25 per cent of the total healthcare expenditur­e.

Mr Shetty said Saudi Arabia is the most promising market for new investment­s and he expects it to account for an increasing share of NMC’s total business over the coming years. The company’s $2bn “war chest” includes $800m already announced by NMC Health chief executive Prasanth Manghat this year – comprising $500m from cash and funded facilities and $300m from the company’s balance sheet, and there are additional reserves from Mr Shetty’s investment coffers, he said. NMC launched a $450m bond offering in April, and in March said it raised a $2bn loan to be used for general corporate purposes and partly to refinance existing debt, but there are no plans for further fundraisin­g at present, the chairman said.

Following investment­s in 2015 in two fertility treatment providers, Fakih IVF and Spain’s Clinica Eugin, NMC wants to expand its business in fertility, as well as in longterm rehabilita­tion and secondary care.

Medical technology is a newer focus for the company, which has begun actively seeking investment­s in this space, Mr Shetty said.

Exponentia­l growth will be there. There is no way growth will come down because we are building, brick by brick B R SHETTY Chairman, NMC Health

 ?? Victor Besa / The National ?? B R Shetty says Saudi Arabia is the most promising market for new investment­s
Victor Besa / The National B R Shetty says Saudi Arabia is the most promising market for new investment­s

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