Malaysia's Iskandar Waterfront to raise $338 million to shrink debt

Reuters  |  KUALA LUMPUR 

By Liz Lee

(Reuters) - Iskandar Waterfront Holdings Sdn Bhd (IWH), which recently offered to buy out its listed unit Iskandar Waterfront City Berhad (IWC), said the merged entity was looking to raise about $338 million this year by issuing new

IWH, controlled by Malaysian property tycoon Lim Kang Hoo, will issue around 600 million new to raise funds as part of the merger to cut debt, senior official as well as the company's financial adviser told

While the price for the has not been finalised, IWH's financial adviser Astramina Advisory estimates that at 2.47 ringgit per share - 10 percent discount to IWC's closing price on Wednesday - the merged entity would raise about 1.5 billion ringgit ($338 million).

"This would substantially pare down the 2 billion ringgit debt consolidated under IWH after the merger. lot of parties have expressed interest (for the placement), some of them are foreign corporates," said Wong Muh Rong, managing director for Astramina Advisory.

The will be issued and privately placed to institutional investors, she said.

Last week, IWH announced plans to buy out the 61.7 percent stake it does not already own in IWC. It will then assume IWC's listed status on Bursa of IWC have jumped as much as 59 percent since the announcement.

The merger deal is expected to be completed in six to nine months, after which IWH targets secondary listing in Hong Kong, China or Singapore within 12 months.

Lim, who is also IWH's executive vice chairman, said secondary listing plans will materialise when the merged company's market capitalisation hits 30 billion ringgit. The company has not decided how much it will raise.

IWC's market capitalisation is currently 2.26 billion ringgit, Thomson data shows.

Lim told he was considering secondary listing in Hong Kong or China "because that is the market from which we brought in the investors (who) have deep pockets".

Separately, Lim said development works for the city centre project Bandar Malaysia's Phase 1 was expected to begin by April. In December 2015, IWH and China Railway Engineering Corp bought 60 percent stake in Bandar from troubled Malaysian state fund 1MDB for 7.41 billion ringgit.

($1 = 4.4340 ringgit)

(Reporting by Liz Lee; Editing by Himani Sarkar)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Malaysia's Iskandar Waterfront to raise $338 million to shrink debt

KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - Iskandar Waterfront Holdings Sdn Bhd (IWH), which recently offered to buy out its listed unit Iskandar Waterfront City Berhad (IWC), said the merged entity was looking to raise about $338 million this year by issuing new shares.

By Liz Lee

(Reuters) - Iskandar Waterfront Holdings Sdn Bhd (IWH), which recently offered to buy out its listed unit Iskandar Waterfront City Berhad (IWC), said the merged entity was looking to raise about $338 million this year by issuing new

IWH, controlled by Malaysian property tycoon Lim Kang Hoo, will issue around 600 million new to raise funds as part of the merger to cut debt, senior official as well as the company's financial adviser told

While the price for the has not been finalised, IWH's financial adviser Astramina Advisory estimates that at 2.47 ringgit per share - 10 percent discount to IWC's closing price on Wednesday - the merged entity would raise about 1.5 billion ringgit ($338 million).

"This would substantially pare down the 2 billion ringgit debt consolidated under IWH after the merger. lot of parties have expressed interest (for the placement), some of them are foreign corporates," said Wong Muh Rong, managing director for Astramina Advisory.

The will be issued and privately placed to institutional investors, she said.

Last week, IWH announced plans to buy out the 61.7 percent stake it does not already own in IWC. It will then assume IWC's listed status on Bursa of IWC have jumped as much as 59 percent since the announcement.

The merger deal is expected to be completed in six to nine months, after which IWH targets secondary listing in Hong Kong, China or Singapore within 12 months.

Lim, who is also IWH's executive vice chairman, said secondary listing plans will materialise when the merged company's market capitalisation hits 30 billion ringgit. The company has not decided how much it will raise.

IWC's market capitalisation is currently 2.26 billion ringgit, Thomson data shows.

Lim told he was considering secondary listing in Hong Kong or China "because that is the market from which we brought in the investors (who) have deep pockets".

Separately, Lim said development works for the city centre project Bandar Malaysia's Phase 1 was expected to begin by April. In December 2015, IWH and China Railway Engineering Corp bought 60 percent stake in Bandar from troubled Malaysian state fund 1MDB for 7.41 billion ringgit.

($1 = 4.4340 ringgit)

(Reporting by Liz Lee; Editing by Himani Sarkar)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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