May 10, 2024

Bertelsmann Confirms Plans to Sell Stock in RTL

The German media conglomerate Bertelsmann confirmed plans on Thursday to raise money for acquisitions by selling stock in RTL, the biggest commercial broadcaster in Europe.

Bertelsmann, which currently controls 92 percent of RTL, said it planned to reduce its ownership to as little as 75 percent through a public stock offering and private sales to institutional investors. The company said it planned to sell RTL shares on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange “before the summer,” adding to existing listings in Luxembourg and Brussels, where RTL is thinly traded.

No price was given, but Ian Whittaker, an analyst at Liberum Capital in London, estimated that at current market prices, the sale would raise €2 billion to €2.2 billion, or $3 billion to $3.3 billion.

Thomas Rabe, chief executive of Bertelsmann, told reporters last month that Bertelsmann planned to raise money to fuel an expansion in digital media and developing markets, which are growing faster than the company’s core businesses in Europe.

RTL, which owns television channels and radio stations in many European countries, including Germany, France and the Netherlands, has been Bertelsmann’s cash cow for years, but broadcasting is a slow-growing business.

RTL does, however, also own a television production house that Mr. Rabe has identified as a key source of future growth — Fremantle Media, the television production house behind shows like “American Idol” and “The X Factor.”

“We have resolved to make Bertelsmann more growth-oriented, more digital and more international in the coming years,” Mr. Rabe said at a news conference in Berlin as Bertelsmann announced its 2012 financial results last month. At the time, the company, which is privately held by the Mohn family, reported sales growth of 4.5 percent, to €16.1 billion.

One driver of that growth, Mr. Rabe said, was the “Fifty Shades of Grey” book series, published by a Bertelsmann unit, Random House. Bertelsmann recently moved to bolster its book publishing operations by agreeing to merge Random House with Penguin, which is owned by Pearson, a British media company. The companies are still waiting for regulatory clearance in Europe to complete that deal.

Another potential growth area identified by Mr. Rabe is Bertelsmann’s music arm, BMG, which manages the rights to songs by artists like Duran Duran and Johnny Cash but does not operate in the troubled record label business. Bertelsmann this week announced that it had taken over full control of BMG by buying a 51 percent stake from Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, a private equity firm.

Mr. Rabe has said the company plans to spend as much as €3 billion on acquisitions over the next three years. Instead of using it all for one big purchase, he told reporters in Berlin, Bertelsmann would prefer to do a number of medium-size deals.

Other areas of growth, he added, include education, professional publishing and the Fremantle content production business, prompting considerable speculation among analysts about possible takeover targets.

“They clearly don’t want to use all their firepower at once,” Mr. Whittaker said. “There are plenty of niches in digital. If you look at what Axel Springer has done, that should give you a pretty good indication.”

Axel Springer, a German newspaper publisher, has expanded its digital operations by buying medium-size Internet businesses like SeLoger and AuFeminin in France.

While Mr. Rabe last year raised the possibility of an initial public offering of Bertelsmann stock, he said in March that this option was now “off the table for the foreseeable future.” In January, Bertelsmann gave the first indication that it was instead weighing the possibility of reducing its stake in RTL.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/05/business/global/05iht-bertelsmann05.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

DealBook: German Property Firm Backed by Goldman Plans I.P.O.

A street scene in Berlin. The German property market is robust, fueling interest in real estate companies.Mark Simon for The New York TimesA street scene in Berlin. The German property market is robust, fueling interest in real estate companies.

LONDON – A German property company owned by the Goldman Sachs investment fund Whitehall announced on Monday that it was planning an initial public offering, one of the first new listings in Europe this year.

The I.P.O. of LEG Immobilien, which specializes in residential property, is expected to raise up to 1 billion euros ($1.3 billion). Shares in the company are expected to start trading in February, according to people with direct knowledge of the matter, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly.

The announcement comes as many European stock markets have rebounded after a last-minute agreement on the United States budget was brokered at the end of last year.

Several multibillion-dollar offerings late last year, including those of the Russian telecommunications company MegaFon and the British insurer Direct Line, have also raised hopes that Europe’s capital markets are slowly opening for new I.P.O.’s in 2013.

Another German real estate company, Deutsche Annington Immobilien, which is controlled by the private equity company Terra Firma Capital Partners, is also reported to be planning a public offering this year.

Under the terms of the announcement on Monday, LEG Immobilien said it would list on the Frankfurt stock exchange. The value of its real estate portfolio, including debt, was around 4.7 billion euros last year.

Whitehall and a fellow investor, Perry Capital, are expected to retain a stake in the company after the I.P.O., according one person with direct knowledge of the matter. Goldman Sachs and Perry Capital bought LEG Immobilien, which owns more than 90,000 properties in Germany, for about 3.4 billion euros from the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia in 2008.

Goldman Sachs has been an active investor in European real estate in the last several years. Late last year, the bank’s Whitehall investment fund sold a portfolio of five European hotels to a joint venture part owned by the property company Host Hotels Resorts for 440 million euros. In 2011, Goldman and the private equity firm Cerberus Capital Management also raised about 470 million euros through the initial offering of the German property company GSW Immobilien.

Goldman Sachs and Deutsche Bank are joint global coordinators and bookrunners on the offering, while Berenberg Bank, Commerzbank, Erste Bank and Kempen are co-lead managers.

Article source: http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2013/01/07/goldman-backed-property-company-announces-i-p-o/?partner=rss&emc=rss