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Hong Kong Property Tycoon Peter Woo to Take Wheelock Private

Hong Kong Property Tycoon Woo to Take Wheelock Private

(Bloomberg) -- Wheelock & Co., one of Hong Kong’s largest property developers, is offering shareholders a 52% premium to delist and become a private company.

The Woo family, Wheelock’s largest shareholder, is offering one share each of Wharf Real Estate Investment Co. and Wharf Holdings Ltd. to Wheelock investors, according to an exchange filing Thursday. Investors will also receive HK$12 cash for every share of Wheelock they own.

The transaction aims to unlock shareholder value “through the elimination of the historical holding company discount of the company’s stake in Wharf REIC and Wharf,” Wheelock said.

Other benefits of the proposal include higher dividend income from Wharf REIC and Wharf shares in addition to a return on cash, plus enhanced choice for “shareholders through separate and direct ownership of Wharf REIC shares and Wharf shares with higher trading liquidity,” according to statement.

Wheelock holds around 66.5% of the issued shares of Wharf REIC and about 70.7% of Wharf, a property company that’s also focused on development in mainland China and Hong Kong.

The offer values Wheelock shares at HK$71.90 each, the statement said. That’s 52% more than the last trading price before the stock was halted on Feb. 24 pending the announcement.

Chance of Success

Based on the total number of Wheelock shares outstanding gives a transaction value of around HK$147.6 billion ($18.9 billion). Based on the total number of scheme shares of 667.4 million gives a value of about HK$48 billion, with the Woo family needing to pay around HK$8 billion cash.

“The number on the surface is large, but in fact the share prices of the other two companies are much lower,” Raymond Cheng, a property analyst at CGS-CIMB Securities Ltd., said. “So there’s a high chance for the major shareholder to succeed in the privatization.”

Cheng added that for Wheelock’s other shareholders, the best result would have been an all-cash deal.

“The plan has almost 85% of the price paid by one unit of Wharf’s shares and another unit of Wharf REIC, which are subject to market fluctuations,” he said.

Wheelock shares surged as much as 50.3% to HK$71 when trading resumed Thursday afternoon before closing up 39.7% at HK$66.00.

Wealth Boost

That instantly boosted Peter Woo’s net wealth by $3.3 billion to $15.1 billion as of market close. Woo, the patriarch of the family, was the seventh-richest person in Hong Kong as of Wednesday, according to Bloomberg Billionaire’s Index. He retired as chairman of Wheelock and Wharf in May 2015.

Wheelock has traded at a discount to its holdings in Wharf and Wharf REIC. Its combined stake in the two companies at the Feb. 24 closing price was HK$123.7 billion, exceeding its own market value of HK$97 billion, according to the statement.

What Bloomberg Intelligence says:

Wheelock’s proposed privatization could boost shareholders’ return and dividend income. An extensive Hong Kong residential land bank should allow it to sustain property sales by keeping its project pipeline full through 2023.

-- Patrick Wong, real estate analyst

For the full report, click here

Wheelock is Hong Kong’s fifth-largest developer by market value. Controlled by the Woo family and founded in 1857, its projects include the ultra-luxury Mount Nicholson development on the Peak, plus a large real estate presence in Tseung Kwan O.

Wharf REIC, meanwhile, owns Tsim Sha Tsui’s Harbour City as well as Times Square in Causeway Bay. Wharf spun off Wharf REIC in 2017 to enable the group to focus on its investments in Hong Kong shopping malls.

Over the years, Woo has been streamlining businesses within the Wharf family group. In 2016, Wharf sold telecoms company Wharf T &T Ltd. to a consortium including MBK Partners and TPG Capital. It also exited investments in I-Cable Communications Ltd., a Hong Kong cable TV operator.

The proposed privatization isn’t the first for a real estate company in Hong Kong. New World Development Co. did a similar thing in 2016 when it privatized its China unit New World China Land Ltd. to streamline overlapping business.

--With assistance from Venus Feng.

To contact the reporters on this story: Shawna Kwan in Hong Kong at wkwan35@bloomberg.net;Vinicy Chan in Hong Kong at vchan91@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Katrina Nicholas at knicholas2@bloomberg.net, Peter Vercoe

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