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CNN: Malaysia bids $1B for UEM [Renong] By Alex Frew McMillan 24/7/2001 5:46 am Tue |
[Mesti ada sebabnya Mahathir beria-ria dengan kes Renong dan UEM
ini. Kita simpan komen dulu di lain hari. Cuma cuba fikirkan apakah
yang dapat dimanfaat dengan wang sebanyak $1B ini dan siapa yang
lebih layak menerimanya dalam era krisis sebegini.
Sekarang musim ekonomi Jepun sedang sakit (Nikkei 16 year low), Singapura
dilanda kemelesetan secara teknikal dan Taiwan tenat seketika (7 year low).
Tetapi negara China begitu 'steady' sahaja...
- Editor] By CNN's Alex Frew McMillan KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia -- The Malaysian government launched a bid
Monday that could see it take control of the country's largest
conglomerate. The government offered $1.0 billion (3.7 billion
ringgit) for United Engineers Malaysia Bhd. (UEM), the country's
largest construction company. UEM is the key company in the Renong group. Buying UEM would make
the government the largest shareholder in Renong Bhd.
It could also signal the departure of Renong's chairman, Halim Saad,
who would lose control of Renong after 11 years in charge.
But one analyst warned that the offer for UEM was not
high enough to win over investors.
The country's biggest borrower
The Renong group conglomerate spans 15 companies in numerous industries,
including oil, banks, transport, telecommunications and property.
The government wants to clean up Renong and reduce its massive debt
burden. It owes $3.4 billion (13 billion ringgit), making it Malaysia's biggest
private borrower. It racked up huge debts in the Asian financial crisis.
Like many Asian conglomerates, Renong has a complicated structure of
companies that own part of each other. It owns 37.1 of UEM, which owns
32.6 percent of Renong. Halim is executive chairman of Renong, but he owns just 16.5 percent. So
buying UEM would effectively give the government control of the Renong
group, too. There is speculation Halim would then step down. He resigned a position on
UEM's board in June. Halim, 47, is a protégé of former finance minister Daim Zainuddin. But Daim
resigned last month after falling out of favor with Prime Minister Mahathir
Mohamad. Investors have cheered the idea that a government takeover of Renong might
signal the end of favoritism for the politically well-connected in Malaysian
business. Offer of $1.18 per share "not enough"
Instead of bailing Renong out, the government is trying to take it over.
Mahathir is thought to be directing the takeover personally.
Malaysia made the offer for UEM via a subsidiary of its investment arm,
Khazanah Nasional Bhd. That subsidiary, Syarikat Danasaham, was specially
set up in 1999 as a takeover vehicle.
Khazanah offered $1.18 (4.50 ringgit) per UEM share on Monday, and 11
cents (40 Malaysian cents) for every warrant.
It said it wants to buy all of UEM and take the public company off the stock
exchange, or "delist" it. If it wins over 90 percent of the investors, it can
forcibly buy out the rest and delist UEM.
But Uday Jayaram, senior investment analyst at ING Barings in Kuala Lumpur,
said the offer is not good enough. UEM's fundamental value is between 8 and
9 ringgit per share, he said. "The government does want to send the message that the day of bailouts is
over," Jayaram said. But the 26 percent premium over Tuesday's close is not
enough to reward shareholders who have held UEM stock for years. "You have this opportunity to give them some value for the ownership of
these shares. That's not being done," he said.
Shared cost Ultimately, the government, UEM's shareholders and its creditors will likely
have to share the cost of helping Renong restructure.
But taking UEM "doesn't solve anything for the market as a whole, and it
doesn't solve anything for minority shareholders," Jayaram said.
The government has 35 days to get an official offer to UEM's board and
shareholders, or to make any changes in what's now a preliminary bid.
UEM's investors will then have three weeks to decide whether to accept.
To complicate matters, Halim owes UEM 3.2 billion ringgit, after failing to
come through on a 1998 commitment to buy stock. He has so far not paid the
debt after getting a 60-day extension in July.
UEM's managing director, Ramli Mohamad, is expected to quit, according to
local media. Trading in the stocks of both Renong and UEM was halted again Monday.
They were frozen last Tuesday, ahead of Monday's announcement.
http://www.bloomberg.com/fgcgi.cgi?ptitle=Top%20Financial
%20News&s1=blk&tp=ad_topright_topfin&T=markets_bfgcgi_content99.ht&
s2=ad_right1_topfin&bt=ad_position1_topfin&middle=ad_frame2_topfin&
s=AO1uH2hNkTWFsYXlz Malaysia to Spend $984 Mln to Buy UEM; Seeks to Delist Firm
By T.H. Chan Kuala Lumpur, July 23 (Bloomberg) -- Malaysia's Khazanah Nasional Bhd.
plans to spend 3.7 billion ringgit ($984 million) to buy all of United Engineers
Malaysia Bhd. as part of a plan to take control of parent Renong Bhd.
Khazanah, a state investment arm, offered to buy shares of toll road operator
United Engineers, or UEM, at 4.50 ringgit a share, a 26 percent premium to
its share price of 3.56 ringgit when they were halted from trading last week.
Khazanah also offered to buy 98 million UEM warrants at 40 sen each. If the
takeover is successful, it will seek to delist the company from the stock
exchange. Malaysia said last week it will wrest control of Renong, the nation's biggest debtor, from tycoon Halim Saad to help cut more than $8.7 billion of the country's overdue corporate debt and boost investor confidence. |