May 5, 2024

DealBook: Suntory Plans Big I.P.O. for Its Food and Beverage Unit

Suntory Beverage and Food, Japan’s largest manufacturer of nonalcoholic drinks, plans to raise $4.8 billion in an initial public offering.Yuriko Nakao/ReutersSuntory Beverage and Food is Japan’s largest manufacturer of nonalcoholic drinks.

TOKYO – Suntory Holdings got approval from the Tokyo Stock Exchange on Wednesday to list its food and soft drinks unit, paving the way for what is expected to be Asia’s biggest initial public offering this year.

Suntory Beverage and Food, Japan’s largest manufacturer of nonalcoholic drinks, has set a preliminary target to raise around 475 billion yen ($4.8 billion), two people with direct knowledge of the offering said on Wednesday.

If it raises that much, the deal would be the biggest I.P.O. in Asia this year, and the second-biggest equity sale in the region after Japan Tobacco’s $7.3 billion follow-up offering in March.

Facing a saturated market at home, the company has been eager to raise money to bolster its presence outside Japan. In 2009, Suntory bought the European beverage maker Orangina Schweppes for 2.6 billion euros, or $3.4 billion at current exchange rates, and followed up with the acquisition of the Funcor Group, one of New Zealand’s largest beverage makers.

The offering comes at an opportune time. Tokyo’s stock market has surged almost 40 percent this year and around 65 percent in the last six months, thanks to optimism over economic policies promised by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

Companies listed in Japan have raised a total of $18.6 billion this year in 70 new share sales, data from Thomson Reuters show, more than triple the $5.9 billion raised in 50 deals in the period a year earlier. The figures include I.P.O.’s, follow-up offerings and convertible bond sales.

Suntory, a century-old company based in Osaka and known for producing Japan’s first whiskey — the actor Bill Murray famously pitched it in fictitious advertising in the film “Lost in Translation” — is one of Japan’s largest privately held companies. Its sprawling operations are as varied as brewing beer, manufacturing soft drinks and growing and selling flowers. In Japan, it is also the distributor of Häagen-Dazs ice cream and runs Pepsi’s bottling businesses.

Analysts have said that despite a pickup in the domestic economy, Japan’s graying, shrinking population does not bode well for growth in food and beverages. That leaves companies in that sector with little choice but to look elsewhere. Kirin Holdings and Asahi Group Holdings, Suntory’s rivals in Japan, are also looking to expand overseas through acquisitions.

Suntory’s beverage unit plans to sell 119 million shares to the public at a preliminary price of 3,800 yen ($37.40) apiece, said the people familiar with the matter, who were not authorized to speak to the news media. The deal includes an option to sell an additional 6.2 million shares if demand is strong.

The beverage unit will issue 93 million new shares and the parent company will sell 26 million existing shares. After the listing, Suntory Holdings will own 61.5 percent of the beverage company.

Suntory and its bankers will market the deal to potential domestic investors for two weeks beginning Friday, and will go on tour to present the offering to international investors from Monday through June 12. The offering is set to be split evenly between domestic and foreign investors, though the exact breakdown could change in line with investor demand during the book-building period, according to the filing.

The price range for the deal will be announced on June 17, and final pricing will be set on June 24. Shares in the beverage unit will begin trading on July 3, according to a filing with the Tokyo Stock Exchange on Wednesday.

The lead global underwriters on the deal are JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley and Nomura Holdings. The lead banks on the domestic portion of the offering are Nomura and Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities.

Neil Gough reported from Hong Kong.

Article source: http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2013/05/29/suntory-unit-eyes-asias-biggest-i-p-o-of-2013/?partner=rss&emc=rss

Ahead of Woodford Meeting, 3 Olympus Executives Resign

The company said that three senior executives who had previously lost their roles had already resigned from the board and from the company entirely.

The moves were a compromise ahead of what was expected to be a tense showdown between Mr. Woodford and the Olympus management in the meeting on Friday.

In a statement signed by President Shuichi Takayama, the company provided no time frame but said the board had no intention of resigning before pulling Olympus back from a crisis that has raised concerns that the company’s shares might be delisted from the Tokyo Stock Exchange.

A delisting would erase all shareholder value, constrain the company’s access to capital and cloud the company’s future as a going concern, analysts have said.

Mr. Woodford was fired by Olympus last month over what the company characterized as a management culture clash. But Mr. Woodford said he had been dismissed after he raised questions about $1.4 billion in payouts related to mergers and acquisitions of obscure recipients.

Mr. Woodford said that the Olympus board, which had been aware of the questions he raised, was discredited and should resign.

Olympus later acknowledged that those payments, made from 2006 through 2008, were part of an effort to cover up losses on past investments.

Behind the plan, the company said, were Tsuyoshi Kikukawa, who stepped down as chairman last month, and Hisashi Mori, who was dismissed as executive vice president. The corporate auditor, Hideo Yamada, also implicated in the cover-up, submitted his resignation as well.

The three executives who resigned will not attend the board meeting on Friday, Olympus said. Mr. Kikukawa, Mr. Mori and Mr. Yamada, the company added, would continue to cooperate with an investigation by a committee of legal experts appointed by Olympus.

Mr. Woodford, a British national, has offered to return to the company to lead a turn-around. He arrived from London late Wednesday and on Thursday met with Japanese financial regulators, prosecutors and the police, who are investigating the scandal.

Olympus did not address whether the company would accept Mr. Woodford’s offer.

Under scrutiny are $687 million in fees paid in 2008 to an obscure financial adviser for Olympus’s acquisition of the British medical equipment maker Gyrus — fees equal to roughly a third of the $2 billion acquisition price and more than 30 times the going rate.

Olympus also acquired three small Japanese companies from 2006 to 2008 with little in common with its core business for a total of $773 million, only to write down most of the value of each within the same fiscal year it was acquired.

Law enforcement agencies in the United States and Britain are also investigating the case.

In Japan, officials are looking at whether money flowed to companies with links to organized crime.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/25/business/ahead-of-woodford-meeting-3-olympus-executives-resign.html?partner=rss&emc=rss