The Star Early Edition

Ascendis is considerin­g taking the firm private after it completes its recapitali­sation

- DINEO FAKU dineo.faku@inl.co.za

ASCENDIS Health said yesterday that it was considerin­g taking the company private as an option in the short-to-medium-term after it completes its recapitali­sation programme.

Ascendis, the South African health and well-being company, which is grappling with a R7 billion debt burden, also said that it was contemplat­ing the sale of its remaining business. Ascendis acknowledg­ed that it was at a critical strategic juncture and actively evaluating the value creation opportunit­ies available arising from the successful completion of the group recapitali­sation.

“The option of remaining a listed group, while still being reviewed, is challenged by the significan­tly reduced scale of New Ascendis Health, the costs associated with remaining listed and limited capital availabili­ty in relation to various growth opportunit­ies in the remaining businesses. “Noting the board has engaged with the various interested parties in the remaining assets and is forming a perspectiv­e on the viability and value propositio­n of a sale of the remaining businesses in the group over the short-to-medium term, including the option of taking the New Ascendis Health private,” said the group.

Earlier this month, Ascendis announced the recapitali­sation to address its debt and a divestment programme aimed at selling all the group’s assets, except for Farmalider, Pharma South Africa and Consumer South Africa, to stay alive.

However, the company said yesterday the board was in talks with prospectiv­e buyers for what was left of the business.

“The board has engaged with the various interested parties in the remaining assets and is forming a perspectiv­e on the viability and value propositio­n of a sale of the remaining businesses in the group over the short-tomedium term, including the option of taking the New Ascendis Health private,” said the group.

Ascendis has previously announced the sale of its South African businesses Respirator­y Care Africa and Animal Health.

The group said year-on-year revenue from continuing operations was largely flat and expected to close within a range of R2.16billion to R2.27bn compared to R2.203bn a year earlier.

The group said earnings from continuing

operations were negatively impacted by a combinatio­n of net funding costs, once-off transactio­n and restructur­e related costs and as the current costs of the head office.

Group operating expenses included head office-related costs of between R143 million compared to R142m in the prior year.

“The most significan­t cost categories within head office relate to payroll and staff-related expenses, lease and office-related costs as well as regulatory costs related to the audit and processes required to drive compliance as would be required in a listed environmen­t,” said Ascendis.

The company said the target head office cost structure would be capped at 2.5 percent of the aggregate revenue of the remaining businesses.

“A head office restructur­e programme commenced in April this year aimed at significan­tly reducing the cost of the head office and aligning it to the new structure of the group.

“In line with this, a retrenchme­nt process commenced in April.

“Further, the group gave notice to vacate its Bryanston head office in July next year,” said Ascendis.

 ?? | ?? ASCENDIS acknowledg­ed that it was at a critical strategic juncture and actively evaluating the value creation opportunit­ies available arising from the successful completion of the group recapitali­sation. Supplied
| ASCENDIS acknowledg­ed that it was at a critical strategic juncture and actively evaluating the value creation opportunit­ies available arising from the successful completion of the group recapitali­sation. Supplied

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa