
Chinese pork producer Zhongpin agrees PE-backed take-private
NASDAQ-listed Chinese pork producer Zhongpin has agreed to a private equity-backed management buyout by its chairman and CEO, Xianfu Zhu. The deal values the company at $502 million.
Two companies controlled by Zhu and his co-investors, Golden Bridge Holdings and its wholly-owned unit Golden Bridge Merger Sub, will pay $13.50 per share for the 74% of Zhongpin that they don't already own. The offer represents a 47% premium to the company's closing price on March 26, the day before the Zhu submitted his bid.
The investor group has secured $85 million in equity financing from a private equity vehicle called China Wealth Growth Fund I while China Development Bank (CDB) will provide a $320 million loan facility. Under the terms of the agreement, Zhongpin has until January 25 to solicit other bids.
Zhongpin is essentially a cold chain logistics company. It sources fresh and frozen meat and fruit and vegetables from local suppliers, processes the products, and transports them to the end distributors. Its network covers about 3,400 retail outlets in 20 provinces. Sales revenue reached $1.45 billion in 2011, up 54% year-on-year, while net income increased 10% to $64.2 million.
Low valuations among small- to mid-cap US-listed Chinese companies, in part driven by a spate of accounting scandals in the past couple of years, have prompted chairmen and owners to consider privatizations, often with a view to re-listing on an Asian bourse. Private equity investors often participate as execution partners and capital providers.
Zhongpin is incorporated in Delaware and Golden Bridge Merger Sub, the vehicle created to facilitate the merger, is registered in the same jurisdiction. However, Golden Bridge Holdings is a Cayman Islands company, which suggests that Zhu ultimately has his eye on a re-listing in Hong Kong. It is far easier for Cayman-incorporated companies to list in the territory than those from Delaware.
Prior to the Zhongpin announcement, 46 transactions have been announced since 2010, 17 of them involving private equity. However, an announcement is no guarantee of a closure: only four of these PE-backed deals have been completed as of October, data from AVCJ Research and Roth Capital Partners show.
Skadden Arps is legal advisor to the buyer and Credit Suisse is their financial advisor. O'Melveny & Myers and Akin Gump and are providing legal counsel to Zhongpin and the board-appointed special committee, respectively.
Latest News
Asian GPs slow implementation of ESG policies - survey
Asia-based private equity firms are assigning more dedicated resources to environment, social, and governance (ESG) programmes, but policy changes have slowed in the past 12 months, in part due to concerns raised internally and by LPs, according to a...
Singapore fintech start-up LXA gets $10m seed round
New Enterprise Associates (NEA) has led a USD 10m seed round for Singapore’s LXA, a financial technology start-up launched by a former Asia senior executive at The Blackstone Group.
India's InCred announces $60m round, claims unicorn status
Indian non-bank lender InCred Financial Services said it has received INR 5bn (USD 60m) at a valuation of at least USD 1bn from unnamed investors including “a global private equity fund.”
Insight leads $50m round for Australia's Roller
Insight Partners has led a USD 50m round for Australia’s Roller, a venue management software provider specializing in family fun parks.