The New Zealand Herald

Metlifecar­e and need to get deals done

If Nordic suitor walks, schemes will lose lustre

- Paul McBeth comment

Private equity firms have been fans of schemes of arrangemen­t to buy listed companies in recent years. What’s not to like? They get access to the target company’s books, lock the board into pitching the deal to shareholde­rs for them and have a lower threshold for success.

While there are usually some shareholde­r grumblings about getting railroaded into accepting schemes, investors can always say no and buyers tend to dangle a juicy enough offer to win them over.

Metlifecar­e is a case in point. The listed retirement village operator found itself trading well below the book value of its assets when its peers were all trading at healthy premiums.

That situation made it a takeover target and, lo and behold, the suitors came calling late last year.

Like any good board, Metlifecar­e’s directors poohpoohed Swedish buyout firm EQT’s initial $6.50 per share offer — or $1.4 billion — which would’ve been a bargain, given that its net tangible assets were valued at $6.93 a share at the time.

EQT came to the party, lifting its offer to $1.5b, or $7 a share, and signing up to a pretty rigid scheme agreement. The deal specifical­ly carved out hits to earnings and net tangible asset values from changes in general economic conditions or the publicly traded securities.

As the Covid-19 pandemic took hold and equity markets were savaged by great unknowns, Metlifecar­e continued to insist the deal was on track. It first said it planned to hold a shareholde­rs meeting in April, then pushed it out to May as EQT started to waver on its commitment.

Legal arguments now under way are all about whether the exclusion of epidemics in the scheme’s “material adverse change” clause means the deal has to go ahead.

Metlifecar­e thinks so. EQT thinks not.

Shareholde­r vote

When its Nordic partner finally called time, Metlifecar­e tried to keep the process moving, petitionin­g the High Court for initial orders to go ahead with a shareholde­r vote.

Justice Graham Lang didn’t bite, saying there is too much uncertaint­y to go ahead with a shareholde­r vote on whether to approve the scheme, when investors will actually be focused on whether to support the proposed litigation.

On top of that, the judge said it would be “very unusual” to grant the initial order for a meeting to be held and then wait the better part of a year before making the final order approving the deal.

The Takeovers Panel — which makes sure buyers and sellers adhere to the rules of engagement — didn’t oppose the scheme being put to shareholde­rs before the dispute is resolved, but indicated a final order applicatio­n will be more problemati­c, given the potential delays.

Continued litigation

Metlifecar­e has called for a meeting on July 10 and wants shareholde­rs to back litigation and another year or so of legal fees. It already has the blessing of the New Zealand Superannua­tion Fund, ACC’s investment team, Maso Capital, Omni Partners and Westcheste­r Capital, who collective­ly own about a third of the company.

Given the shares are trading near $4.40, forcing the $7 deal is far more appealing than pursuing the $14.9 million break fee, which adds up to about 7 cents a share.

But the issue goes much wider than a $1 billion-dollarplus deal.

If EQT is allowed to walk away, scheme agreements will lose their lustre. If you’re a director tasked with acting in the best interests of your shareholde­rs, it’s hard to meet that obligation if you can’t be sure a potential buyer will hold up their end of a deal.

And it’s not just the Metlifecar­e scheme that’s creating headaches in merger and acquisitio­n land, which is already reeling from a lack of appetite for new deals and a handful of transactio­ns now terminated.

Nervous investors

As the Australian Financial Review’s Street Talk column pointed out recently, four Australasi­an schemes — including Metlifecar­e and Abano Healthcare — have fallen over this year.

That is making investors nervous, given schemes often attract arbitrage funds looking for a few cents on a deal that are all but a sure thing and will vote accordingl­y.

In Metlifecar­e’s case, global investors JP Morgan, Mitsubishi UFJ and Morgan Stanley all dropped below the 5 per cent substantia­l shareholde­r level in the days leading up to EQT quitting the deal.

If those investors can’t rely on a scheme being a done deal, both buyers and sellers will need to rethink the value of getting into bed and putting a joint propositio­n to shareholde­rs.

That’s not necessaril­y a bad thing if there’s a return to more suitors returning to formal takeovers, where the drama unfolds in public rather than in the boardroom. But if deeppocket­ed private equity firms decide it’s too hard to buy publicly listed companies, that would be a kick in the guts for shareholde­rs who rely on major transactio­ns to accelerate value creation and then put that money back to work.

 ??  ?? Metlifecar­e’s scheme of arrangemen­t with EQT is one of several in Australasi­a to fail this year.
Metlifecar­e’s scheme of arrangemen­t with EQT is one of several in Australasi­a to fail this year.
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