AustraliaDaily Briefs

Daily Brief Australia: Link Administration, Tyro Payments and more

In today’s briefing:

  • Link Admin (LNK AU): ACCC Approval & Index Changes
  • Link Admin Gets ACCC Nod. Woodford Condition Outstanding
  • Link’s Scheme in the Home Stretch by Securing ACCC and CBI Approval
  • Tyro in Play as It Rejects Potentia’s A$1.27 Offer

Link Admin (LNK AU): ACCC Approval & Index Changes

By Brian Freitas

  • The ACCC will not oppose the proposed acquisition of Link Administration (LNK AU) by Dye & Durham removing a major hurdle. Other regulatory approvals are still pending.
  • If regulatory clearances are received in the next week and the Court approves the Scheme, Link Administration (LNK AU) will stop trading at the close on 15 September.
  • We estimate passive trackers across all indices will need to sell 35.53m shares (A$153m; 18 days of ADV) of Link Administration (LNK AU) at the close on 15 September.

Link Admin Gets ACCC Nod. Woodford Condition Outstanding

By David Blennerhassett

  • Link Administration (LNK AU) has announced the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission will not oppose Dye & Durham’s proposed acquisition.
  • The next step is the rescheduled second court hearing on the 15 September.
  • The key outstanding condition concerns the “Woodford Matters”, and whether D&D potentially waives this condition, or digs in its heels.  

Link’s Scheme in the Home Stretch by Securing ACCC and CBI Approval

By Arun George

  • Dye & Durham/DND’s proposed acquisition of Link Administration (LNK AU) at A$4.81 per share has received approvals from the ACCC and the Central Bank of Ireland.
  • Key conditions precedent remaining are FIRB, UK FCA and Luxembourg approvals. The second court hearing date has been adjourned to 15 September.
  • The transaction is in the home stretch and will likely complete. At the last close, the gross and annualised spread for a 27 September payment is 4.8% and 151%, respectively.

Tyro in Play as It Rejects Potentia’s A$1.27 Offer

By Arun George

  • Tyro Payments (TYR AU) rejected an indicative proposal from the Potentia consortium at A$1.27 per share as it was highly conditional and materially undervalued the business.
  • Grok, the largest shareholder will vote for a Potentia scheme unless there is a rival scheme which is A$0.25 per share higher than the value of the Potentia proposal.
  • Potentia’s move puts Tyro in play, and Grok’s involvement will force the Board to get an improved offer and/or flush out a competing bidder. There is another round to go.

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