In this briefing:
1. Delta’s Less-Than-Straightforward Tender Offer
On 1st August 2018, Delta Electronics Thai (DELTA TB) (“DELTA”) announced that Delta Electronics International (Singapore) (a wholly-owned subsidiary of Delta Electronics (2308 TT) “DEISG”) had made a conditional voluntary tender offer to acquire the remaining 70.97% stake in DELTA it does not own at Bt71/share, a 1.79% premium to last close (28% above its recent low), in a deal worth potentially up to US$2.1bn.
On Wednesday, DELTA announced that DEISG has successfully accomplished the conditions precedent requirements, that of the antitrust approvals being granted by authorities in US, Europe and China.
The transaction will now move to a tender offer, which is expected to be open for acceptances at the beginning of next month with the consideration potentially paid the second week of April.
But there are a number of unknowns to the tender offer:
- Will there be a maximum number of shares to be acquired, therefore shares tendered could be subject to possible pro-ration?
- Is it DEISG’s intention to delist DELTA?
- Will the full year dividend be netted, or not, from the Bt71/share offer?
- Will the indicative timetable be delayed, especially to factor in the FY18 dividend?
Currently trading at a gross/annualised spread (assuming 12 April payment and no dividend) of 0.4/1.4%, or 5%/22% if including a Bt3.30 FY18 dividend and mid-May payment, factoring in a one-month delay in the tender offer. That looks overly tight in the face of timing delays and actual consideration to be paid if indeed it comes out to be a partial offer.
Get Straight to the Source on Smartkarma
Smartkarma supports the world’s leading investors with high-quality, timely, and actionable Insights. Subscribe now for unlimited access, or request a demo below.