Otago Daily Times

Bapcor exits last of group

- PAUL MCBETH

AUCKLAND: ASXlisted autoparts maker Bapcor has exited the last of the leftover Hellaby Holdings assets it did not want with the sale of industrial asset maintenanc­e firm TBS Group for $35 million, reaping more from the divestment­s than flagged.

The Victoriaba­sed company yesterday signed an agreement to sell TBS to an undisclose­d buyer, with the deal set to settle later this month, it said in a statement. Some $2.5 million of the price won’t be paid until September and is subject to certain conditions.

Bapcor will have generated $99 million from the sale of TBS, Hannahs, Number 1 Shoes, and Contract Resources, beating the $92 million it expected to generate from the divestment­s when reporting its firsthalf earnings in February. The autoparts firm took on the businesses when it bought Hellaby for $352 million and delisted the Kiwi firm from the NZX. But it was only ever interested in the New Zealand company’s automotive unit, which has been tracking ahead of Bapcor’s expectatio­ns.

‘‘The divestment of the final noncore asset relating to the Hellaby Holdings Ltd acquisitio­n is in line with Bapcor’s strategy of specialisi­ng in the automotive aftermarke­t,’’ managing director Darryl Abotomey said. ‘‘The total proceeds from the divestment programme are consistent with Bapcor’s expectatio­ns.’’

Hellaby’s directors tried to fend off the Bapcor takeover, urging shareholde­rs to reject the deal as undervalui­ng the Kiwi company’s different units. However, the Australian firm secured control and declared the deal unconditio­nal.

At the time of the takeover, independen­t adviser Grant Samuel valued Hellaby between $352.2 million and $402.7 million, or $3.60 a share to $4.12. Of that, the automotive unit was the most important with an enterprise value of between $285 million and $313.5 million, followed by the resource services group at $123.8 million to $141.5 million, and the footwear division at between $26 million and $30.3 million.

Hellaby bought TBS three months before Bapcor launched its takeover bid, paying $45 million upfront in cash and scrip.

The sale of the unwanted Hellaby assets means Bapcor effectivel­y paid $253 million for the Kiwi autoparts business, below the bottom range of the Grant Samuel company valuation done back in November 2016.

New Zealand’s auto industry has been enjoying record new car sales in recent years as an expanding population and robust tourism stoke demand for vehicles, while a strong dollar and cheap finance makes them easier to purchase. Government figures show retail sales of motor vehicles and parts rose by 9.4% to $12.43 billion in the year ended March 31, 2017, accelerati­ng from a 4.9% pace of growth a year earlier.

Bapcor shares were unchanged at A$5.60 on the ASX and have slipped 0.9% so far this year. — BusinessDe­sk

 ?? PHOTO: ODT FILES ?? Divested . . . ASXlisted autoparts maker Bapcor has realised $99 million from the sale of industrial asset maintenanc­e firm TBS Group, Hannahs, Number 1 Shoes (pictured, in Dunedin), and Contract Resources.
PHOTO: ODT FILES Divested . . . ASXlisted autoparts maker Bapcor has realised $99 million from the sale of industrial asset maintenanc­e firm TBS Group, Hannahs, Number 1 Shoes (pictured, in Dunedin), and Contract Resources.

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