Exclusive-Activist shareholder Quarz opposes terms of $3 billion
Singapore REIT merger
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[February 10, 2022] By
Anshuman Daga
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Activist investor
Quarz Capital Management said it is opposed to the terms of a proposed
S$4.2 billion ($3.1 billion) merger of two Temasek-linked Singapore real
estate investment trusts, saying the target firm was significantly
undervalued.
It is urging Mapletree North Asia Commercial Trust (MNACT) to negotiate
an improved offer from Mapletree Commercial Trust (MCT), according to a
Feb. 9 open letter reviewed by Reuters.
Quarz, which has previously been successful in blocking a Singapore REIT
deal, says it and its affiliates hold stakes that rank them among the
top 10 unitholders of MNACT.
"We note that Quarz acknowledges the deal rationale...and sees value in
MNACT," the manager of MCT said in a response to Reuters, but did not
elaborate. It said the "merits" of the proposal were made in its joint
announcement with MNACT.
An external spokesperson for MNACT said the company had no immediate
comment on Reuters queries.
On Thursday, MNACT's units were down 1.8% before the Reuters story and
ended up 0.9% on the day at S$1.12. This marked the first time the units
traded above MCT's offer price of S$1.11 since Jan. 3 when markets
resumed trading after the proposed deal was announced on Dec 31.
Singapore state investor Temasek declined to comment to a Reuters query.
Its Mapletree Investments Pte Ltd, a global real estate conglomerate, is
the single largest unitholder in both real estate investment trusts
(REITs), owning 32.6% of MCT and 38.1% of MNACT as of Dec. 29.
MCT had announced plans to buy MNACT, seeking to create the
seventh-largest REIT in Asia with an expected market valuation of about
S$10.5 billion.
MNACT's main portfolio includes one commercial property in Hong Kong and
two in China, while MCT is a Singapore-focused REIT.
"We have received a substantial number of positive responses from MNACT
unitholders who are institutional investors, family offices and retail
investors since the open letter and are looking to step up our
engagement with unitholders through further publications," Jan Moermann,
chief investment officer at Quarz, said in a response to Reuters.
Quarz, which is run by Moermann, a former Swiss banker, said in the
letter that it supports the deal rationale but objects to the merger
ratio and price.
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A Mapletree logo is pictured in its office in Singapore March 4,
2013. REUTERS/Edgar Su
"We agree that the offer is value destructive to unitholders and significantly
undervalues MNACT," Moermann and Havard Chi, Quarz's Singapore-based research
head, said in the letter.
MCT offered to acquire all units of MNACT in exchange for MCT units, or a
combination of both cash and MCT units that gave the target's unitholders
S$1.1949 per unit.
This represented a 7.6% premium to MNACT's Dec. 27 closing price of S$1.11 and
was based on MCT's unitprice of S$2. The companies said the offer was in line
with MNACT's net asset value (NAV) per unit.
Since then, MCT's units have fallen 8% to S$1.84 as of Thursday's close.
Quarz argued in the letter that the offer price represented one of the "highest
discounts to net asset value in the 20-year history of the Singapore REIT market
with multiple takeovers and mergers."
"MNACT's board and management should initiate a transparent and robust process
to sell the assets above NAV of S$1.23 instead of recommending the suboptimal
offer of S$1.08-S$1.10 from MCT ," Quarz said.
It added it was confident MNACT would stage a strong recovery from the second
half of 2022, citing rising global COVID-19 vaccination rates.
Singapore's REIT market is dominated by retail investors who are attracted to
the high dividends paid by trusts as the firms are mandated to pay out 90% of
their rental income. Founded in 2011, Quarz has publicly campaigned against
about a dozen Singapore-listed firms.
It mustered support to block a merger in 2020 between two Singapore REITs, whose
managers are owned by a unit of Asian logistics giant ESR Cayman Ltd, marking a
rare victory for activist funds in the city-state.
($1 = 1.3425 Singapore dollars)
(Reporting by Anshuman Daga; Editing by Edwina Gibbs and Kim Coghill)
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