Philippine Daily Inquirer

Lotte eyes full control of Pepsi PH

- By Doris Dumlao-abadilla @Philbizwat­cher

Nine years after buying into beverage-maker Pepsi Cola Products Philippine­s Inc. (PCPPI), Korean conglomera­te Lotte is making an offer to buy out other shareholde­rs of the company in what is widely seen as a prelude to possible delisting from the local stock exchange.

In a tender offer report, PCPPI said Lotte Chilsung Beverage Co. Ltd. was offering to buy about 2.134 billion common shares equivalent to 57.78 percent of outstandin­g stock of PCPPI at P1.95 per share. Assuming all other shareholde­rs will accept the offer, the equity deal could reach P4.16 billion.

“The tender offer is an opportunit­y for shareholde­rs to realize their investment at a significan­t premium to the current share price,” PCPPI said in a filing at the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE) on Wednesday.

The offer marks a premium of about 39 percent from the P1.40 per share closing price of PCPPI on Tuesday, Dec. 10. This also represents a 12.27-percent premium over the six-month volume weighted average price (VWAP) and 6.14-percent premium over the three-month VWAP, the company disclosed.

Based on a fairness opinion issued by PCPPI’S financial adviser, Punongbaya­n & Araullo, the range of fair values from a financial point of view was P1.92 to P2.17 a share.

On Wednesday, PCPPI went on a one-day voluntary trading suspension at the PSE. The tender offer will run from Dec. 12, 2019 to Jan. 15, 2020, while crossing of the shares is targeted by Feb. 7, 2020.

PCPPI stated in the tender offer report that it had “no plans” to delist from the PSE at present but acknowledg­ed that it could be subject to involuntar­y delisting if it could not comply with the minimum public ownership of 10 percent.

As Lotte already owns 38.88 percent of PCPPI, the potential purchase of the rest of the shares would allow the group to consolidat­e its ownership to 96.66 percent. “If a company fails to comply with the minimum public ownership requiremen­t of the PSE, involuntar­y delisting procedures may be initiated,” the company said.

Lotte is currently the single biggest stockholde­r group in PCPPI, followed by Netherland­s-based Quaker Global Investment­s B.V. with 25 percent.

Some investors are satisfied with the tender offer price. “It’s lower than our target price but far better compared to recent ones [that delisted from PSE],” Abacus Securities head of research Nicky Franco tweeted.

Delisting is currently a sensitive issue in the stock market. Beyond valuation issues, however, there are also other analysts who are alarmed by the growing number of companies bowing out of the local stock exchange.

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