Weekend Herald

Kathmandu wraps up Rip Curl purchase

- Aimee Shaw

Kathmandu Holdings has completed its A$350 million acquisitio­n of Australian surfing brand Rip Curl and appointed Reuben Casey as chief executive for its Kathmandu division, with Xavier Simonet continuing as group chief executive.

Kathmandu said Chris Kinraid will continue as group chief financial officer, while Michael Daly will carry on as chief executive of the Rip Curl business.

Casey, who is currently chief operating officer, Kinraid and Daly will all report to Simonet.

Casey joined Christchur­ch-based Kathmandu in 2010 as a financial controller. He works out of the retailer’s Christchur­ch office, and Simonet in the Melbourne headquarte­rs.

“Reuben has been a key contributo­r to the success of Kathmandu over the last few years,” Simonet said.

Dual ASX/NZX-listed Kathmandu launched a takeover bid to acquire Rip Curl for A$350m ($368m) at the start of the month. The transactio­n was financed through a capital raising of $144.5m, and placement of approximat­ely $32m of Kathmandu shares to the founders and CEO of Rip Curl. Approximat­ely $230m of the acquisitio­n price was funded through secured debt facilities.

Major Kathmandu shareholde­r Rod Duke, managing director of Briscoe Group, requested allocation of 5.33 million shares during the capital raising, valued at $13.6m at the issue price of $3.06 apiece.

The share allocation represente­d just 50 per cent of Briscoe’s total entitlemen­t.

The retail company opted not take up all of its rights as Duke said a total $88m investment in the company — equivalent to a 16 per cent shareholdi­ng — was “about where it wanted to be”.

“The Board considers the level of investment to be at an appropriat­e level and as the single largest shareholde­r we continue to maintain a close interest in the company,” Duke told the Herald.

He said Briscoe was “supportive of Kathmandu’s initiative­s to diversify and grow their business via the acquisitio­n”.

Kathmandu’s acquisitio­n of Rip Curl creates a billion-dollar opportunit­y for the company, combined with its Oboz Footwear brand.

The company said the acquisitio­n would lift its earnings by 10 per cent in the 2020 financial year, and was expected to take the company into new growth territory.

Meanwhile, American footwear retailer Nike sold its surf and skate brand subsidiary, Hurley, for an undisclose­d sum after 17 years.

Kathmandu increased its share price by more than 9 per cent in the year to July 31 and posted an annual net profit of $57.6m. It sales during the last financial year increased by 9.7 per cent to $545m. It has a market capitalisa­tion of $925.4 million and nearly 295 million shares on issue after the capital raising.

The company’s shares closed at $3.13 yesterday.

 ?? Photo / Bloomberg ?? Kathmandu bought Rip Curl for $368m.
Photo / Bloomberg Kathmandu bought Rip Curl for $368m.

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