Affinity's Tegel may be heading for NZX 50 as fund managers warm to chicken business
By Jonathan Underhill
Oct. 6 (BusinessDesk) - Tegel Foods may be headed for the NZX 50 Index in an initial public offering that could value
Affinity Equity Partners' New Zealand poultry business at about $800 million, although there is a question mark about
whether the sale could be completed this year.
Affinity hired Goldman Sachs and Deutsche Bank in August for advice on sale options for New Zealand's biggest chicken
producer, which it acquired from Pacific Equity Partners in 2011, reportedly for $600 million. Executives at Tegel have
met Charoen Pokphand Group, Thailand's biggest private company, and JBS, the world's biggest meat processor, as part of
the sales process, the Australian Financial Review's Street Talk column reported today. BusinessDesk understands that
while a trade sale is possible, an IPO is the default scenario.
Tegel and its advisers have just completed an unofficial roadshow to make the case for a share sale with institutional
investors in New Zealand. Fund managers who declined to be named said the business appeared to be in reasonable order
and was "worth a look" although as with all companies coming to market, the success of an IPO would come down to price
and market conditions. One investor said Tegel would need to press on if it wanted to get a sale away before Christmas.
The financial statements for Tegel's immediate parent in the year ended April 26 show earnings before interest and tax
rose 5 percent to $45.8 million, and revenue grew 8.8 percent to about $563 million. Ross Group Holdings refinanced $204
million of bank borrowings, $67.9 million on a mezzanine facility and settled interest rate swap contracts with a new
three-year bank facility on Aug. 7, the annual report shows. Annual finance costs were little changed at $35 million in
the 2015 year, when interest rates on the company's debt ranged from 7.5 percent to 15 percent.
An IPO could leave Affinity with anywhere from 20 percent to 50 percent of the company, although it is believed to be
targeting 30 percent to 35 percent and would retain a holding to benefit from upside in the business. Its shares would
likely be subject to an escrow arrangement following an IPO. At $800 million, the company would be bigger than Summerset
Group Holdings and Nuplex Industries.
Since buying the business in 2011, Affinity has sold property including two long-lease chicken processing plants to
buyers, among them Wellington-based Caniwi Capital. A share sale would allow investors to gain exposure to a poultry
industry that has been predominantly owned by private equity.
Inghams Enterprises (NZ), the country's second-largest poultry producer, was sold, along with its Australian parent
Ingham Enterprises, to TPG for A$880 million in June 2013.
(BusinessDesk)