Buller may make full takeover bid for Pulse
Buller may make full takeover bid for Pulse
By Suze Metherell
Sept. 10 (BusinessDesk) - Lines company
Buller Electricity may make a full cash takeover for the 44
percent of small-scale electricity retailer Pulse
Electricity that it doesn't already own in partnership with
an undisclosed third party.
Pulse, which has been in
a trading halt since Tuesday, has formed a committee of
independent directors, chaired by Trevor Janes, to consider
the potential transaction, it said in a statement. The
Auckland-based electricity retailer said a price was not
known, but it is understood Buller will offer a premium to
the current share price of 6 cents. The shares trade on the
New Zealand Alternative Index, and under the offer, Buller
would acquire all mandatory convertible notes and employee
share options on issue.
"Pulse understands that a
number of steps preparatory to BEL giving takeover notice
would need to be completed," it said in a statement. "At
this time it is unclear precisely when a takeover notice
will be given to Pulse. It is also possible that no takeover
notice will be given or no offer will be made."
Pulse ceded a controlling stake to Buller Electricity in 2011 to repay debt and provide capital for expansion after the minnow retailer ran out of cash and leaned on the shareholder to get it through. Buller Electricity is the local lines network company on the West Coast of the South Island. It reported an annual profit of $328,000 in the year to March 31, on operating revenue of $110 million, according to its 2015 annual report.
In June, Pulse reported a
$2.9 million loss in the year ended March 31, from $2.8
million the year before. During the year, it received $13.9
million in shareholder loans while repaying loans from
shareholders of $14.4 million and issued $4.8 million of
convertible notes at the same time as entering into new
banking arrangements with Bank of New Zealand and dropping
Westpac Banking Corp, which had required a parent guarantee.
Borrowing costs were expected to be lower with BNZ, it
said.
The result included a 27 percent increase in
revenue to $101.8 million, compared with $74.1 million the
previous year and customer numbers grew by 7,317 to
54,761.
The company, started in 2004, is one of 24 on
the NZAX market which will be eventually be closed in favour
of the new NXT
market.
(BusinessDesk)