Take-private deal could value Razer at up to US$4.5 billion -sources

FILE PHOTO: Min-Liang Tan, co-founder and CEO of Razer, attends the debut of the company at the Hong Kong Exchanges in Hong Kong, China November 13, 2017. REUTERS/Bobby Yip
HONG KONG :A consortium led by top executives of Razer Inc plans to value the Hong Kong-listed maker of gaming hardware at up to HKUS$35 billion (US$4.5 billion) in a deal to take it private, said two people with direct knowledge of the matter.
Chairman Min-Liang Tan and non-executive director Kaling Lim, with a combined stake of nearly 60per cent in Razer, lead the group offering up to HKUS$4 a share, the two sources said, or almost double its average price of HKUS$2.1 over the past month.
The move comes as the consortium believes Razer, based in the United States and Singapore, has been undervalued in Hong Kong, where investors typically pay more attention to tech firms from mainland China, they added.
The sources declined to be identified because of confidentiality constraints.
Razer declined to comment. Tan and Lim also declined to comment on a Reuters query made via the company.
Shares of Razer were up more than 10per cent by 0521 GMT on Tuesday, after giving up some of their increase of 23per cent in afternoon trade following the Reuters report.
In late October, the company said in a filing Tan and Lim were in preliminary talks with financial investors to explore the possibility of a transaction.
The consortium is also in talks with private equity firm CVC Capital Partners for the buyout, said one of the two sources, and two others with knowledge of the matter.
Buyout firm KKR has also studied the deal but has yet to decide whether to invest, said the first two sources and another person.
CVC and KKR declined to comment.
The talks have advanced and the consortium aims to announce the deal by the end of 2021, the first two sources said.
It aims to eventually list Razer in New York to exploit higher valuations for tech stocks, they added.
RAZER PERFORMANCE
Founded in the United States and Singapore in 2005, Razer has expanded from wireless mice to make gaming laptops and keyboards besides other accessories.
It swung to a record net profit of US$31.3 million in the first half of 2021, riding a gaming boom as lockdowns over COVID-19 kept people at home, versus a net loss of US$17.7 million a year earlier.
The United States accounted for 42per cent of first-half revenue.
Razer went public at HKUS$3.88 per share in the Asian financial hub in 2017, in a stellar debut powered by strong retail demand for new technology stocks.
But its share price more than halved last month from this year's peak of HKUS$3.36 in February, while the benchmark Hang Seng Index fell 24per cent over the same period.
However, the shares have jumped 30per cent to five-month highs since the October filing on investor talks.
A deal would further feed a surge in strategic investors and buyout firms tapping Hong Kong companies for take-private opportunities, lured by undervalued shares.
Hong Kong-listed firms have been involved in US$8.15 billion worth of take-private deals in 2021, versus US$23 billion for all of last year, Refinitiv data showed.
(US$1=7.7923 Hong Kong dollars)
(Reporting by Julie Zhu and Kane Wu; Editing by Himani Sarkar and Clarence Fernandez)