AB InBev pulls Budweiser listing, canceling year's largest IPO
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[July 13, 2019] By
Julie Zhu, Joshua Franklin and Philip Blenkinsop
HONG KONG/NEW YORK/BRUSSELS (Reuters) -
Anheuser-Busch InBev said on Friday it will not proceed with the planned
listing in Hong Kong of its Asia Pacific unit, Budweiser Brewing Company
APAC Ltd, in what would have been the world's biggest initial public
offering (IPO) of 2019.
AB InBev, the world's largest brewer, was aiming to sell as much as $9.8
billion in Budweiser stock to seek relief from its heavy debt burden. AB
InBev shares ended trading in New York down 3%, as investors saw that
prospect slipping away.
The canceled IPO is also a setback to the Hong Kong stock exchange,
which hoped Budweiser's listing would help attract other high-profile
international companies at a time of increased trade tensions between
the United States and China.
UK-based data center operator Global Switch and consumer lender Home
Credit Group are among the international companies that have been eying
Hong Kong IPOs.
AB InBev said the decision was due to "several factors, including the
prevailing market conditions," despite the Hong Kong stock market being
almost flat on Friday and trading close to its historic highs.
Sources close to the IPO said investors were unwilling to entertain AB
InBev's expectations for the Budweiser APAC business to trade at a
valuation multiple above that of peers.
Budweiser APAC, whose portfolio of more than 50 beer brands includes
Stella Artois and Corona, was marketing its shares with an indicative
range of HK$40-HK$47. While it received offers within that range from
hedge funds and private wealth managers, some large long-only U.S.
investors, which are often prioritized in an IPO, made offers below the
HK$40 per share level, the sources said.
The indicative price range valued Budweiser at 15.5-18.2 times its
enterprise value to its estimated 2020 cash flow, according to the
sources. By comparison, AB InBev trades at 10.3 times its projected
12-month earnings, China-focused peer Tsingtao trades at 14.1 times, and
Japan's Kirin, another Asia-centric brewing giant, trades at 9.9 times,
according to Refinitiv data.
Unlike U.S. bourses, the Hong Kong stock exchange also restricts
companies' ability to discount their IPOs. Limiting AB InBev's options
was its decision not to take advantage of a provision that would have
given it leeway to lower Budweiser's price range by 10%, as long as it
flagged that as a risk in the IPO prospectus.
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Portfolio beer brands of Budweiser Brewing Company APAC Ltd are
displayed during a news conference on the company's IPO in Hong
Kong, China July 4, 2019. REUTERS/Andrew Geoffrey Jackson/File Photo
AB InBev had expected Budweiser's IPO to eclipse Uber Technologies as the
biggest IPO of the year. It ended up being the third-largest listing ever to be
withdrawn, after Sociedad Estatal Loterias y Apuestas del Estado in 2011 and AIA
Group in early 2010, according to Dealogic.
"It was the right thing to do. I'm glad they didn't do this if the demand was
soft," Liberum analyst Nico von Stackelberg said of AB InBev's decision.
AB InBev left the door open to revisit the IPO, saying it "will closely monitor
market conditions."
HIGHLY LEVERAGED PARENT
The canceled IPO is also a blow to the investment banks leading it, JPMorgan
Chase & Co and Morgan Stanley. Morgan Stanley in the first six months of 2019
earned more fees from Asia Pacific IPOs than any other U.S. or European bank,
according to Refinitiv league table data, while JPMorgan was ranked 31st.
Budweiser APAC was seeking to raise between $8.3 billion and $9.8 billion
through the float, much of which was to go toward paying down debt at its highly
leveraged parent.
AB InBev has been working to reduce a debt pile of more than $100 billion that
it built up with the purchase of nearest rival SABMiller in late 2016.
AB InBev cut its dividend for 2018. It has said it will reduce its net
debt-to-EBITDA ratio to below 4.0 by the end of 2020 from 4.6 at the end of last
year, saying it is not dependent on the Asian flotation. It puts the optimal
ratio at 2.
The company had positioned its Hong Kong listing as creating a champion in
Asia-Pacific, where sales are growing as increasingly wealthy consumers turn to
premium beer brands.
The IPO was set to precede Alibaba's plans to raise as much as $20 billion
through a Hong Kong listing.
Last month, logistics real estate developer ESR Cayman Ltd shelved its Hong Kong
IPO of up to $1.24 billion "in light of the current market conditions."
(Reporting by Julie Zhu in Hong Kong, Joshua Franklin in New York and Philip
Blenkinsop in BrusselsAdditional reporting by Jennifer Hughes in Hong Kong,
Rachel Armstrong in London and Jessica DiNapoli in New York; editing by Louise
Heavens, Susan Thomas, Leslie Adler and Cynthia Osterman)
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