AGL Energy Returns With Fresh Takeover Offer for Vocus -- Update
June 10 2019 - 8:07PM
Dow Jones News
By Robb M. Stewart
MELBOURNE, Australia--AGL Energy Ltd. (AGL.AU), one of
Australia's biggest power utilities, is plotting a foray into
telecoms with an about US$2.1 billion bid for Vocus Group Ltd.
(VOC.AU).
The electricity generator and retailer revisited interest in
Vocus after rival suitor EQT last week dropped a higher-priced
offer, and has secured due diligence access to Vocus's books with a
non-binding offer of 4.85 Australian dollars (US$3.38) a share. In
late May, AGL said it had withdrawn an offer for Vocus after
failing to agree due diligence terms.
Potential buyers have been circling Vocus in recent years, and
the company has attracted private-equity interest that has each
time failed to turn into a firm offer.
AGL, which has a market value of more than A$13.7 billion, said
buying Vocus fit with its strategy of meeting the needs of
increasingly connected customers as energy and data value-streams
converge and the traditional energy sector transforms.
Vocus has built a telecommunications infrastructure platform
across Australia and New Zealand, with networks in capital and
regional cities. In Australia, its fiber network extends more than
14,000 miles, focused on a range of corporate, small business,
government and residential customers.
AGL's offer was pitched at an almost 27% premium to the last
closing price for Vocus's shares, but below the A$5.25 a share that
Swedish asset manager EQT had offered before pulling out which had
valued Vocus at US$2.26 billion. Vocus's shares have been trending
higher over the last year, yet remain well below a peak above
A$9.25 in mid-2016.
A takeover of Vocus would further shake up Australia's telecom
industry, which has struggled in recent years with heightened
competition and the ongoing rollout by the federal government of a
nationwide broadband network that sells wholesale access to telecom
operators. TPG Telecom Ltd. (TPM.AU) and Vodafone Hutchison
Australia have proposed merging their respective fixed-line and
mobile operations, but are seeking approval in court after the deal
was earlier this month blocked by Australia's antitrust
regulator.
AGL said that strategically acquiring Vocus was expected to
bring customer loyalty and operating-cost benefits from integrating
the two companies' customer platforms. It also offered an
opportunity to accelerate what it said was Vocus's untapped growth
potential in high-quality broadband fiber infrastructure, as well
as an opportunity for AGL to absorb the telecom company's
data-center operation.
Vocus's board has allowed AGL four weeks exclusive due diligence
so it could prepare a binding offer. AGL said it was assessing
funding, but intended to use existing cash and new debt facilities
and anticipated a deal would bolster earnings per share in the
first 12 months of securing Vocus.
Vocus Managing Director and Chief Executive Kevin Russell said
the company was focused on executing a turnaround strategy, though
the interest Vocus had received had presented a clear market
opportunity.
Both companies said there was no certainty a firm offer would
result from the discussions.
Last week, Sweden's EQT said it had decided to pull its takeover
bid after gaining access to Vocus's books last month.
In late 2017, competing private equity firms KKR & Co. and
Affinity Equity Partners ended talks with Vocus after finding they
couldn't support a takeover offer on terms that were acceptable to
the telecom company's board. The company had attracted an
indicative offer from KKR months earlier worth about A$2.18
billion, and a month later Affinity made a bid at a matching
price.
Write to Robb M. Stewart at robb.stewart@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
June 10, 2019 19:52 ET (23:52 GMT)
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