MELBOURNE, March 7 (Reuters Breakingviews) – The Canadian fund manager and its tech billionaire partner are abandoning a green takeover plan after their sweetened $6 bln bid was rejected. It leaves the Aussie power producer grappling with a weak demerger proposal and a pushy investor. Boss Graeme Hunt will feel the heat.Full view will be published shortly.Follow @AntonyMCurrie on TwitterRegister now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comEditing by Jeffrey Goldfarb and Thomas ShumOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias. .
CONTEXT NEWS- Brookfield Asset Management and Atlassian co-Chief Executive Mike Cannon-Brookes are walking away from an A$8.3 billion ($6.1 billion) takeover proposal for Australian power company AGL Energy, according to a March 6 tweet by Cannon-Brookes.- The consortium “looking to take private & transform AGL is putting our pens down – with great sadness,” he tweeted.- The decision follows AGL’s board rejection of a sweetened offer at A$8.25 a share, a 10% increase from the original offer.- The revised entreaty valued AGL’s equity at just under A$5.5 billion, a 15% premium to the price on Feb. 18, the day before the Brookfield group made its first offer, and a 31% premium to the three-month volume-weighted average price. Including debt, the offer valued the AGL enterprise at nearly A$8.3 billion.Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comBrookfield Aussie coal bid hits toxic smokescreens
Storm clouds can be seen behind chimneys at the Bayswater coal-powered thermal power station located near the central New South Wales town of Muswellbrook, Australia, March 14, 2017. Picture taken Mach 14, 2017. REUTERS/David Gray Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterMELBOURNE, Feb 23 (Reuters Breakingviews) – Brookfield Asset Management (BAMa.TO) and Grok Ventures’ A$5 billion ($3.6 billion) offer for AGL Energy read more has reignited Australia’s dirty climate wars. The asset manager and the investment fund of Atlassian (TEAM.O) co-founder Mike Cannon-Brookes want to plough up to A$20 billion into the coal-heavy power company to speed its shift to solar and wind. That ought to be a welcome development for a struggling target read more and for a federal government finally paying lip service read more to net-zero greenhouse-gas emissions. Instead, they’re returning to tired old anti-renewables tropes.The bidders face some deserved hurdles as it is. Success would mean Brookfield part-owning not just Australia’s largest power producer and retailer, but also, thanks to a recent A$10 billion club deal for AusNet, significant parts of the country’s transmission grid. That raises potential but probably not insurmountable competition concerns.To seal a deal, wannabe buyers also need to up their 4.8% premium. Some shareholders may agree that AGL’s plan to demerge its two divisions will destroy value, but Brookfield and Grok have to work off where the shares trade, not where they think they should. AGL Chief Executive Graeme Hunt is overplaying his hand implying he needs at least a 30% premium to start talks. But there’s probably some middle ground.Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterTrouble is, Hunt is raising the more serious spectre of Brookfield-Grok disrupting the energy market. That seems disingenuous while pitching for a higher offer, but he’s following the government’s lead: On the back of the bid, Prime Minister Scott Morrison warned early coal plant closures mean “electricity prices go up”. Treasurer Josh Frydenberg asserted it was an “indisputable fact” proved by the 2017 closure of Hazelwood power station.That specific comparison is wielded out of context: French owner Engie only gave six months’ notice before switching Hazelwood off, with no plans to replace production. And rising gas prices and big coal suppliers gaming the system also played a big role in price hikes, according to Australia’s own competition commission and researchers at the University of Melbourne.Brookfield and Grok are giving at least eight years’ notice and will only mothball coal once enough renewables are up and running. Of course, a parliamentary election due by May is fuelling tried and tested populist politics. The buyers could do without the toxic smokescreen.Follow @AntonyMCurrie on TwitterCONTEXT NEWS- AGL Energy Chief Executive Graeme Hunt on Feb. 22 said the A$5 billion ($3.6 billion) offer from Brookfield Asset Management and Grok Ventures offered very poor value for shareholders. He told The Australian newspaper that investors “typically, for a change of control…are looking for premium 30-40 plus per cent over whatever the appropriate share trading range is for the company”.- Hunt also called into question the consortium’s ability to replace AGL’s coal-fired power stations with adequate renewable energy sources by 2030. On the same day federal Treasurer Josh Frydenberg said it was an “indisputable fact” that energy prices will go up if coal-fired power stations close early, referring to the shutdown of the Hazelwood plant in Victoria in 2017.- Any takeover offer which leaves a foreign company owning 10% or more in an Australian company deemed part of critical infrastructure like energy, financial services, food and grocery, and water and sewage is subject to approval by the Foreign Investment Review Board, which submits its recommendations to the country’s Treasurer.- AGL’s bid represents a 4.8% premium to the stock’s closing price on Feb. 18. The prospective buyers made their approach on Feb. 19. The company’s board said on Feb. 21 that it had rejected the offer.Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterEditing by Jeffrey Goldfarb and Katrina HamlinOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. .
Australia’s AGL Energy rejects $3.5 bln offer, backs decision to split
- Australia’s 2nd richest man, Canada’s Brookfield made joint bid
- Offer was at a 4.7% premium to AGL’s last close
- AGL says demerger plans on track
Feb 21 (Reuters) – Australian power producer AGL Energy Ltd on Monday rejected a $3.54 billion takeover offer from billionaire Mike Cannon-Brookes and Canada’s Brookfield Asset Management (BAMa.TO) in favour of its plan of splitting in two this year.AGL said the A$7.50 apiece proposal from Cannon-Brookes, Australia’s second-richest man and co-founder of software firm Atlassian, and the Canadian buyout group was a 4.7% premium to the stock’s Friday close and undervalued it.”The proposal does not offer an adequate premium for a change of control and is not in the best interests of AGL Energy shareholders,” AGL Chairman Peter Botten said.Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterThe unsolicited cash proposal with an option for AGL shareholders to elect a scrip alternative also provided limited other information about how the deal would be structured, Botten said.Cannon-Brookes’ investment vehicle, Grok Ventures, and Brookfield did not immediately respond to a request for comment.The profits and value of AGL, Australia’s biggest polluter, have shrunk on government pressure to cut retail rates, waning investor appetite for coal-fired power and an influx of solar and wind energy into the grid.The Australian Financial Review had reported on Sunday that the parties made a joint bid for AGL which included plans to halt its proposed split into a bulk power generator and a carbon-neutral energy retailer. AGL plans to re-brand as Accel Energy and hold the company’s coal-fired power plants and wind farm contracts. It would spin off AGL Australia Ltd, the country’s biggest retailer of electricity and gas, into a separately listed company. read more AGL said earlier this month it had made significant progress in its demerger plans and repeated on Monday that the split was on track to be completed by June. “The board is confident that the demerger will create a strong future for both parts of the business,” Botten said.($1 = 1.3961 Australian dollars)Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterReporting by Harish Sridharan and Shashwat Awasthi in Bengaluru; editing by Grant McCoolOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. .
Treasury Wine shares surge as ex-China growth begins to pay off
Bottles of Penfolds Grange wine and other varieties, made by Australian wine maker Penfolds and owned by Australia’s Treasury Wine Estates, sit on shelves for sale at a winery located in the Hunter Valley, north of Sydney, Australia, February 14, 2018. REUTERS/David GrayRegister now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterFeb 16 (Reuters) – Treasury Wine Estates (TWE.AX) said on Wednesday its operating earnings outside mainland China jumped 28%, underpinned by growth in its luxury and premium brands, sending shares of the world’s largest standalone winemaker nearly 12% higher.Treasury has had to re-direct supply to the United States, Europe and domestically after a diplomatic row between Canberra and Beijing effectively closed the lucrative Chinese market to Australian wine.The company said it recorded strong growth in its Americas and premium brands businesses, both of which reported a 19% rise in their earnings before interest, tax, SGARA and material items (EBITS).Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegister“Penfolds growth was particularly strong in Asian markets outside of Mainland China … increasing distribution in Asia, domestic markets, Europe and the United States was a key execution highlight,” the company said in a statement.Reported EBITS, excluding Australian COO wine sold in mainland China, rose to A$262.4 million ($187.7 million), narrowly missing market expectations of A$265 million while its total net profit slid 7.5% to A$109.1 million.The company said trading conditions for the remainder of fiscal 2022 were expected to remain broadly in line with the first half across its key markets and channels.”Despite FY22 potentially shaping up to be slightly softer than expectations, we see Treasury doing a commendable job building demand for its products in new markets,” Citi analysts said in a note.Treasury shares jumped as much as 11.8% to A$11.78 in early trading, while the broader market (.AXJO) rose 0.4%.The company said it plans to increase prices across select portfolio brands to partly mitigate the impact of elevated supply chain costs and logistics. The Melbourne-based firm retained its interim dividend of 15 Australian cents per share.($1 = 1.3986 Australian dollars)Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRegisterReporting by Tejaswi Marthi and Savyata Mishra in Bengaluru; Editing by Aditya Soni and Sherry Jacob-PhillipsOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. .