The Pak Banker

JDW Sugar completes share buyback exercise

-

JDW Sugar Mills Ltd said it completed the buyback of two million shares for ultimate cancellati­on in less than two months of initiating the exercise.

The sugarcane processor started purchasing over onefifth of the company's free float - which is the shareholdi­ng that's in the hands of public investors as opposed to locked-in shares held by sponsors - in small chunks on Nov 11 at the rate prevailing in the stock market.

Speaking to Dawn, JS Global Assistant Vice President Waqas Ghani said the company bought back its shares at a weighted average price of Rs439.44 apiece. The size of the buyback transactio­n is, therefore, Rs878.9m, he said.

"The share buyback indicates that the company likes its own stock enough to purchase it from the general public," said Mr Ghani. Companies buy back their stocks to either cancel them altogether or hold them as treasury shares. Both moves result in the reduction of the number of outstandin­g shares available in the open market. The exercise results in higher earnings per share as their total number of shares goes down and break-up values improve.

JDW Sugar Mills' decision to buy back its shares was aimed at improving its "future financial position". It used the funds from its "distributa­ble profits" and utilised its "internally generated cash flows" for the transactio­n.

The volume of buyback transactio­n (2m) has reduced the number of outstandin­g shares of JDW Sugar Mills from 8.96m to 6.96m. Many listed companies have carried out share repurchase exercises in the ready market in recent months. For example, Bank Alfalah Ltd completed its buyback of 200m shares last Friday in what constitute­d the biggest repurchase transactio­n (Rs6bn) executed so far in Pakistan.

Earlier, Netsol Technologi­es Ltd and Maple Leaf Cement Factory Ltd bought back portions of their respective outstandin­g shares. The buyback of Lucky Cement Ltd is still in process as the cement maker has acquired about 36pc of the intended volume so far.

In addition, Engro Corporatio­n Ltd will also begin buying back its shares from February 3 in an exercise that's expected to surpass the Bank Alfalah transactio­n in terms of both volume and value of shareholdi­ng. Going by the closing rate, Engro Corporatio­n's buyback of 70m shares should be worth around Rs18.9bn. The targeted volume constitute­s 12.1pc of the company's total outstandin­g shares.

The changes in buyback regulation­s were introduced via an amendment to the Companies Act 2017 on Dec 4, 2021. Now the repurchase can only be made through the stock exchange on the basis of the prevailing share price. This is different from the previously allowed method of a tender offer, which involved a company asking stockholde­rs to sell shares for a specific price at a predetermi­ned time.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan