China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Li Ka-shing bids $5.4b for Duet

- By BLOOMBERG

Hong Kong billionair­e Li Ka-shing’s Cheung Kong Infrastruc­ture Holdings Ltd has offeredA$7.3 billion ($5.4 billion) in cash for Australia’s Duet Group as it seeks to expand its power and gas pipeline assets.

CKI offered A$3 per share for the infrastruc­ture company, 28 percent more than Friday’s close, Sydney-based Duet said onMonday.

The company’s board said it is evaluating the nonbinding and conditiona­l offer that pushed its shares to the highest level in eight years.

The bid is the latest attempt by Li to bolster his Australian business this year. The tycoon experience­d a setback in August when Australia’s Foreign Investment Review Board blocked CKI from buying a majority stake in state-owned Ausgrid concerns.

“FIRB approvals remain a significan­t barrier to a deal proceeding,” Paul Johnston, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets in Melbourne, said in a note to clients after the deal was first reported.

CKImayhave to takeonan Australian partner to help secure approval, Johnston said, and noted local pension fund UniSuper already has a 16 percent stake.

Duet’s shares jumped as much as 20 percent to A$2.82, the highest since Sept 10, 2008. UniSuper’s investment team is waiting for more informatio­n on the deal, a spokeswoma­n said.

CKI already owns stakes in Australian assets including SA Power Networks, Powercor Australia and Australian Gas Networks. The Duet deal power network on security would be Li’s biggest acquisitio­n in the nation. Wendy Tong Barnes, a spokeswoma­n for CKI, declined to comment.

Macquarie Capital is advising Duet, according to the statement.

Duet’s assets include the Dampier-Bunbury pipeline in Western Australia, a stake in electricit­y distributo­r United Energy, gas distributi­on business Multinet Gas, pipelines business DBP Developmen­t Group and Energy Developmen­ts Ltd, according to Duet’s website.

Separately, CK Hutchison said last week that Indian tax authoritie­s had proposed the conglomera­te pay HK$8.9 billion ($1.15 billion) of capital gains tax on a transactio­n in 2007, when it sold its Indian telecom business to Vodafone Internatio­nal Holdings BV.

 ?? HAO QUNYING / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A robot interacts with a customer at a Bank of Communicat­ions branch in Handan, Hebei province.
HAO QUNYING / FOR CHINA DAILY A robot interacts with a customer at a Bank of Communicat­ions branch in Handan, Hebei province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States