--Source says Carlyle, Seven consider raising A$500-A$700
million from Coates IPO
--IPO may occur as soon as 4Q
(Adds Dealogic Australian IPO figures in final paragraph.)
By Gillian Tan
SYDNEY--Private equity firm Carlyle Group (CG) and Australia's
Seven Group Holdings (SVW.AU) are considering raising up to A$700
million (US$722 million) through an initial public offering of
equipment-hire group Coates Hire, two people familiar with the
matter said Thursday.
Carlyle and Seven--which each own around 46% of the
company--won't sell down their existing stakes, but are considering
the equity markets to raise between A$500 million and A$700
million, one of the people said.
A Carlyle spokeswoman declined to comment and a Seven spokesman
wasn't immediately available.
J.P.Morgan, Macquarie Group, Deutsche Bank and Bank of America
Merrill Lynch have been appointed joint lead managers, while
Commonwealth Bank of Australia will play a co-lead manager role,
focusing on retail distribution, the people said.
The IPO may occur as soon as the fourth quarter of 2012, but
owing to the recent refinancing of A$1.85 billion in Coates Hire
debt, there is no urgency for Seven and Carlyle to rush to
market.
Coates Hires' debt--originally due to expire in July 2013 and
January 2014--has been extended to July 2015 thanks to commitments
from banks in the existing syndicate, including Westpac Banking
Group and Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group Inc., and new commitments
from the likes of Barclays and HSBC.
If Coates Hire joins the Australian Securities Exchange, it'll
be the largest private-equity backed IPO since a TPG-led consortium
sold 100% of its stake in department-store operator Myer Holdings
(MYR.AU) for A$2.2 billion in late 2009. Shares in Myer have never
traded above their offer price of A$4.10 a share.
The most recent private equity-backed ASX IPO was in August
2011, when Australia's Pacific Equity Partners raised A$202 million
by listing KFC-franchisee Collins Foods Ltd. (CKF.AU). The stock
has never traded above its offer price of A$2.50 a share.
Just A$318 million has been raised in Australian IPOs in the
year to date, a 41% decline on this time last year, according to
Dealogic.
Write to Gillian Tan at gillian.tan@wsj.com
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