Brazilian companies hear the siren's call of U.S. stock exchanges
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[December 22, 2021] By
Tatiana Bautzer and Carolina Mandl
SAO PAULO (Reuters) - Pharmaceutical
company Blau Farmaceutica SA, which listed its shares on Brazil's B3
stock exchange in April, has opened its first U.S. plasma bank and may
consider moving its headquarters and stock listing to the United States.
The company, which is currently based in Brazil's Sao Paulo state and,
until now, has been predominantly focused on business in Latin America,
intends to open 10 plasma backs in the United States in addition to its
new site in Florida. Once the expansion is completed, Blau may consider
moving its headquarters to the United States.
In an interview with Reuters, Blau Chief Financial Officer Douglas
Rodrigues said international investors, unlike those in Brazil, are used
to the business models of pharmaceutical companies, including those
engaged in plasma-based medicine.
Blau is one of several Brazilian companies looking at relocating to the
United States and listing on a U.S. exchange, a trend fueled by a desire
for broader access to investors, lower corporate taxes, looser
regulations for controlling shareholders and a better capital markets
dynamic.
The shift shows how the success of tech startups with U.S. listings –
including digital lender Nubank - has spurred interest among Brazilian
companies in other sectors, ranging from retail to cosmetics, in moving
their legal domiciles, mainly to the United States but also to other
locations such as Britain, Ireland and the Netherlands.
SoftBank-backed Banco Inter SA, web services provider Locaweb, retailer
Lojas Americanas and cosmetics maker Natura & Co are among the companies
that have announced such moves.
Brazil's JBS SA , the world's largest meat processor, has also said it
will pursue next year a U.S. listing of its international operations.
On Tuesday, Brazilian planemaker Embraer SA unveiled a deal with special
purpose company Zanite to list its electric flying taxi subsidiary on
the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). Embraer shares soared on the news.
The outflow of Brazilian companies represents a growing risk to B3,
which is starting to look for ways to stem it, as well as to
locally-based fund managers who may find their investment universe
restricted.
Lawyers, bankers and executives, however, expect the trend to continue
for now, although they point out that it will be confined largely to
companies that have significant businesses abroad. They do not expect a
corporate stampede for the exits.
"Some Brazilian companies want to have access to a larger, more
diversified investor base," said Alessandro Zema, head of Morgan
Stanley's Brazil operations.
They also want to cash in on the generally heftier valuations overseas.
Shares of Natura & Co, which has announced its intention to swap its
main listing from B3 to the NYSE, trades at a price-to-earnings multiple
of about 29, compared to rival L'Oreal SA's 41.5.
Banco Inter, which first listed on B3 in 2018, trades at just over 12
times its book value, around half that of its rival Nubank, which
debuted on the NYSE this month.
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People walk past Brazil's B3 Stock Exchange building in downtown Sao
Paulo, Brazil March 9, 2021. REUTERS/Amanda Perobelli/File Photo
Companies that list outside Brazil are looking for markets with more comparable
companies as well as higher valuations, said Jean Marcel Arakawa, a corporate
lawyer at Mattos Filho in Sao Paulo, citing asset managers Patria Investment Ltd
and Vinci Partners Investments Ltd as examples.
Tech companies often decide to redomicile because venture capital investors tend
to prefer to complete funding rounds using holding companies abroad. Another
reason is to entice founders or controlling shareholders to remain at the helm
by allowing them to own shares with special, higher voting rights.
For example, the founding partners of 3G Capital, including tycoon Jorge Paulo
Lemann, will remain powerful players at Americanas SA after the retailer's
merger with Lojas Americanas and U.S. listing. Banco Inter's controlling
shareholders, the Menin family, will be in a similar position at the digital
bank.
NEW RULES
Until recently, Brazilian companies could not locally list the receipts of their
foreign-listed shares through Brazilian Depositary Receipts (BDRs). Some decided
to drop off the local exchange, causing B3 to lose initial public offerings and
trading fees to the NYSE and Nasdaq stock exchange.
Brazil's securities industry watchdog CVM changed that listing rule, prompting
companies such as Nubank and investment broker XP Inc to list their BDRs on B3.
Those BDRs saw huge trading volumes when they debuted.
"We try to accommodate companies' demands as they change," said Flavia Mouta
Fernandes, B3's regulation director.
Brazil has also tried to loosen regulations governing controlling shareholders'
ownership of shares with super-voting rights, although Fabiano Milane, a
corporate lawyer at Stocche Forbes in Sao Paulo, said local regulations still
are not equivalent to those in other countries.
"Companies already listed cannot use super-voting, and the extraordinary voting
rights are temporary," Milane said.
Frustration over the perceived lack of predictability in Brazil's legal system
is another reason that big companies choose to redomicile, says Luis Semeghini
Souza, a lawyer and founding partner at Souza, Mello e Torres in Sao Paulo.
Some bankers, however, are skeptical that the current corporate migration will
become a long-term trend.
"I think the universe of companies that could move is maybe 5% of companies in
B3, mainly the ones that have or intend to have significant business abroad,"
said Roderick Greenlees, global head of investment banking at Itau BBA.
(Reporting by Tatiana Bautzer and Carolina Mandl; Editing by Paul Simao)
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