KKR fund leaps on IPO details
|
|
|
| Posted
:
Mon, 28 Jul 2008 12:58:01 GMT |
| By
:
Reuters |
| Category
:
US (Business) |
| News Alerts by
Email ( click
here ) |
|
US Business News |
Home
|
|
|
|
By Reed StevensonAMSTERDAM (Reuters) - Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co's Amsterdam-listed fund jumped 27 percent during morning trade on Monday after the private equity group detailed plans to list in New York in a public offering.Under public offering plans detailed by the investment group on Sunday, shares in the Amsterdam listed KKR Private Equity Investors (KPE) would be exchanged for newly issued New York Stock Exchange-listed shares and delisted.KPE was among several affiliates of larger private equity funds to list in Amsterdam within the past few years. Lehman Brothers Private Equity Partners Ltd , an affiliate of U.S. bank Lehman Brothers that listed in July 2007, has fund and buyout investments.Buyout firms have listed such vehicles to open up their portfolio to retail investors and boost liquidity. But despite the industry's reputation for high returns on its investments, not all such listed units have been success stories.Most notably, Carlyle Capital Corp, which was an affiliate of U.S.-based buyout firm Carlyle Group and mainly invested in mortgage-backed assets, went bankrupt in March and liquidated its assets as it could not meet margin calls from its lenders.Even US buyout giant the Blackstone Group , which became the first big U.S. private equity firm to go public when it listed in June 2007 just before the credit crunch, has seen its earnings hit and its shares drop sharply from their $31 listing price. Shares closed Friday on the NYSE at $17.01.KKR initially signaled its plan to list in July 2007, when it filed a registration statement for an IPO. However, the credit crunch hit markets, and the prospects of going public for any company became tough. The July 2007 filing by KKR will be morphed into the Amsterdam/NYSE filing, a source familiar with the matter said.The deal also addresses a concern that KPE's stock has traded with little liquidity. Under the deal, KKR is giving KPE stockholders an insurance policy that if the stock does not trade at specified levels, KKR will give up to an additional 6 percent ownership in the company.KPE went public in Amsterdam in May 2006 in a $5 billion, or $25 per share, offering. Shares have fallen since the credit turmoil hit and closed on Friday at $10.50 a share.The shares rallied to $13.31 by 0920 GMT, up 26.8 percent and a three-month high. They had already been near a lifetime low of $10.30.A NYSE listing could value the combined KKR and fund at $15 billion to $19 billion, and KKR itself at $12 billion to $15 billion, a source familiar with the situation said.For KPE shareholders, the deal has an implied value of $16 to $19.20 per share, according to a KKR presentation -- a premium of between about 50 and 80 percent over the current value.KPE holders would own 21 percent of the combined company, with KKR holding the remaining 79 percent.The move comes amid a drought for the private equity industry's traditional business of leveraged buyouts. The mega-buyouts of the past few years dried up abruptly last summer, when the credit crunch shut off the cheap financing that sustained multibillion dollar deals.The transaction is expected to go through in the fourth quarter, meaning KKR should be publicly traded on the NYSE before the end of 2008.The deal also addresses a concern that KPE's stock has traded with little liquidity. Under the deal, KKR is giving KPE stockholders an insurance policy that if the stock does not trade at specified levels, KKR will give up to an additional 6 percent ownership in the company.Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are advising KKR, Citi is advising KPE, and Lazard is advising the independent directors of KPE, the statement said.(Additional reporting by Mathieu Robbins in London, Megan Davies in New York, Anupreeta Das in San Francisco and Jessica Hall in Philadelphia; Editing by David Cowell/Ian Jones) (c) Reuters 2008. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by caching, framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters and the Reuters sphere logo are registered trademarks and trademarks of the Reuters group of companies around the world.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Related News
FDIC: 'Problem' banks at 16-year high in US Washington - The number of US banks in danger of collapse has risen to the highest level in 16 years, a government regulator reported Tuesday in a sign that the country's worst financial crisis in decades is still lingering. The Federal Deposit Insur...
American shoppers lace up racing shoes for Black Friday Los Angeles - Up to 134 million Americans are expected to splash out with their cash when the holiday shopping season kicks off on traditional Black Friday. The National Retail Federation Tuesday said it anticipated that the easing recession will sen...
US stocks edge lower on revised growth figures New York - US stocks fell slightly on Tuesday as government figures showed that last quarter's economic rebound was smaller than initially thought. The Commerce Department in an updated estimate said the economy grew at an annual rate of 2.8 per cent...
US economic rebound smaller than thought; Fed optimistic - Summary Washington - The US economy's rebound from a deep recession was smaller than initially thought, according to new government figures Tuesday, while the Federal Reserve said it expects the country's recovery to pick up...
EXTRA: US central bank issues rosier outlook on economy Washington - The Federal Reserve Tuesday raised its growth forecasts for the US economy, but warned that unemployment in the United States will remain for some time at its highest levels in a generation. The US central bank projected the world's larg...
US levies first-ever fines on airlines who stranded passengers Washington - Three US airlines were fined a total of 175,000 dollars on Tuesday for leaving passengers stranded nearly six hours on an aircraft, the first-ever such penalty imposed by the US government. Continental Airlines and ExpressJet Airlines we...
US economy grew 2.8 per cent in third quarter - Summary Washington - The US economy grew at an annual rate of 2.8 per cent in the third quarter of this year, according to an updated government estimate Tuesday that confirmed the United States has likely emerged from its deepest recession in decades. But t...
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|