Australia's Insignia Financial gets $1.7 billion takeover offer from Bain Capital; shares rise

By Aaditya GovindRao

(Reuters) -Australia's Insignia Financial said on Friday it has received a non-binding takeover all-cash proposal from private equity Bain Capital, valuing the 178-year-old wealth manager at A$2.67 billion ($1.70 billion), in another bid that represents growing interest in the country's investment managers.

Shares in Insignia rose as much as 9.6% to A$3.725 by 0043 GMT, their highest since mid-January, 2023. That made it one of the top gainers on the benchmark index, which was down 0.6%.

Under the offer, Insignia shareholders will receive A$4.00 per share, which represents a 17.6% premium to the stock's closing price of A$3.40 on Thursday.

The stock shot up more than 10% in the last 10 minutes of trade settlements on Thursday following local media reports about the offer.

Founded in 1846, Insignia provides financial advice and asset management services. It had A$319.6 billion worth of funds under management and administration at the end of September.

The company's board is considering the proposal to assess whether to engage with Bain, it said.

Brian Freitas, founder at Periscope Analytics, called Bain's offer "opportunistic," citing Insignia stock's underperformance relative to its peers over the past two years.

The offer "could see pushback from Insignia's board," Freitas said in a note on research platform Smartkarma.

In August, the Melbourne-based company had swung to a full-year statutory net loss after tax, and paused its dividend payments.

Australian investment managers have received major interest by bidders this year, as evidenced by Bain-rival KKR & Co (NYSE:KKR )'s A$2.18 billion deal to buy Insignia-peer Perpetual's wealth management and corporate trust businesses in May.

In September, Platinum Asset Management had also received an A$616.5 million bid from hedge fund Regal Partners, which ultimately fell through.

"Given the recent interest in Australian investment/wealth managers, we could see competing offers emerge," Freitas added.



Bain Capital did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

($1 = 1.5711 Australian dollars)

Source: Investing.com

Publicații recente
Oklo target nearly doubled at Wedbush on AI-driven demand for nuclear energy
24.01.2025 - 18:00
Crypto markets lose steam after Trump's first policy move
24.01.2025 - 18:00
Combination of Google's TPU-DeepMind units may be worth $700 bn - DA Davidson
24.01.2025 - 18:00
British American Tobacco, Altria shares rise after menthol ban proposal dropped
24.01.2025 - 18:00
Morocco stocks higher at close of trade; Moroccan All Shares up 0.34%
24.01.2025 - 18:00
Commerzbank says no talks with UniCredit until specific proposal made
24.01.2025 - 18:00
Venture Global aims for $64 billion valuation at debut in test for energy IPOs
24.01.2025 - 18:00
Intuitive Machines stock surges on NASA contract award
24.01.2025 - 18:00
International Paper's $7.2 billion acquisition of DS Smith gets EU approval
24.01.2025 - 18:00
Short-term stock optimism soars among retail investors, AAII survey shows
24.01.2025 - 18:00
Venture Global shares likely to open up to 6% above IPO price
24.01.2025 - 18:00
Intuitive Surgical, American Express Stir Friday's Market Cap Stock Movers
24.01.2025 - 18:00
BMW joins Chinese EV makers in filing EU court challenge to tariffs
24.01.2025 - 18:00
Turkey stocks lower at close of trade; BIST 100 down 0.08%
24.01.2025 - 18:00
Diageo stock jumps on possible Guinness sale
24.01.2025 - 18:00

© Analytic DC. All Rights Reserved.

new
Analiza pieței Cum va afecta raportul NFP de mâine cursul de schimb al dolarului american?