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Sydney Airport agrees to $17.5 billion buyout as Australia begins reopening – Metro US

Sydney Airport agrees to $17.5 billion buyout as Australia begins reopening

Sydney drops quarantine for Australian travellers for first time in
Sydney drops quarantine for Australian travellers for first time in pandemic

SYDNEY (Reuters) -Sydney Airport Holdings said on Monday it has agreed to accept a A$23.6 billion ($17.5 billion) takeover bid from an infrastructure investor group in one of Australia’s biggest buyouts.

The company said in a statement https://assets.ctfassets.net/v228i5y5k0x4/4E8IujXbovh6jYvB3lFrpF/54f59055011803b98b85aaaf5150644e/SYD_enters_into_Scheme_Implementation_Deed.pdf it unanimously recommended the buyout offer from Sydney Aviation Alliance (SAA), comprised of Australian investors IFM Investors, QSuper, AustralianSuper and U.S.-based Global Infrastructure Partners.

The deal to buy Australia’s largest and only listed airport operator comes as the country this month eased its international border restrictions for the first since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic.

A scheme implementation deed had been made on Monday and a scheme meeting would take place in January, the company said.

It follows a sweetened offer by SAA https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/sydney-airport-board-grant-due-diligence-after-improved-174-bln-offer-2021-09-12 of A$8.75 a share in September – 6% higher than its first approach at A$8.25 – which convinced the company’s board to give the consortium access to due diligence.

“The Sydney Airport Boards believe the outcome reflects appropriate long-term value for the airport, and unanimously recommend the proposal,” Chairman David Gonski said.

The deal is conditional on an independent expert’s report, approval from 75% of the airport operator’s shareholders and a green light from competition regulators and the Foreign Investment Review Board, a process that could take months.

“We look forward to securityholders voting on the proposed deal,” IFM Investors Chief Executive David Neal said in a statement on behalf of the consortium.

“Our alliance represents many millions of Australians … and we intend to work hard to bring more flights and passengers back to the airport as the aviation industry emerges from COVID-19.”

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission is investigating the transaction’s impact on competition, including the impact of the consortium’s ownership of multiple airports in the country. It is due to release its findings on Dec. 16.

IFM Investors owns large stakes in airports in other Australian state capitals, including Brisbane and Melbourne.

RBC Capital analysts said the “unanimous” recommendation of the board had “capped” the potential share price appreciation, which on Monday was 2.79% higher at $8.46.

“I think it’s good deal for investors,” said Jamie Hanna, deputy head of investments at VanEck, an investor in the airport.

“It think shareholders will probably vote to accept it next year.”

The agreement imposes “no shop, no talk” obligations on Sydney Airport and gives SAA the opportunity to match any potential superior proposal, the company said. It includes a A$150 million break-fee payable if the deal is terminated by either party.

($1 = 1.3517 Australian dollars)

(Reporting by Paulina Duran in Sydney and Sameer Manekar in Bengaluru; Editing by Stephen Coates)