Oleg Deripaska in $30bn Hong Kong flotation
Sunday, Sep 27, 2009
点击:
DIRECTORS of Rusal, the aluminium giant controlled by Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska, are this week expected to approve a flotation valuing it at $30 billion (?19 billion).
The deal will be one of the biggest floats of the year and, in a snub to the London Stock Exchange, will take place in Hong Kong.
Rusal, the world’s biggest maker of aluminium, plans to list 10% of its shares on the Asian market and advisers at Credit Suisse and Goldman Sachs are ready to file a prospectus before the end of the week if the board gives the green light.
While most of the global mining and metals groups are listed in London, Rusal is understood to have opted for Hong Kong partly because of a lawsuit in London in which Mikhail Chernoy, a former associate of Deripaska, is claiming more than $4 billion-worth of shares. The Asian bourse has also seen huge demand from Chinese investors and institutions for metals stocks.
The float is conditional on the resolution of long-running talks to restructure Rusal’s $16 billion of debt. Its banks are understood to have agreed in principle to a deal that will spread repayments over the next four years and give them rights to take up to 5% of the equity if it hits performance and repayment targets.
Mikhail Prokhorov, Russia’s richest man, who owns 18% of Rusal and has made loans to the group, has agreed a debt-for-equity swap that will lift his stake to about 23%. That would make him the second-largest shareholder after Deripaska, who holds 54%.
Viktor Vekselberg, another oligarch with an 18% stake, will be made chairman. The company is, meanwhile, holding talks with several sovereign wealth funds — including China Investment Corporation and Singapore’s Temasek — in the hopes of signing them up as cornerstone investors in the float.
Credit Suisse and Goldman are the joint global co-ordinators and bookrunners for the listing. BNP Paribas, Rusal’s single largest creditor, and Bank of China International, are the other two bookrunners.
Under the proposed timeline the prospectus will be filed this week. Formal marketing would start in November ahead of a projected pricing of the shares and listing in December. The timing is critical. As part of a three-way merger in 2006 with rival Sual and the aluminium assets owned by Glencore, the Swiss commodities trader, Deripaska pledged to list the combined group by December 31. If it does not go ahead, Deripaska has to buy their shares at a price based on a valuation of the company at $30 billion to $35 billion.
The recession and collapse in the aluminium price hit Rusal and Deripaska’s personal wealth hard and he is not thought to have the money to buy the stock.
Unicredit, the Italian banking giant, is plotting a €4 billion (?3.7 billion) share issue as part of its efforts to avoid taking state aid. Credit Suisse, Goldman Sachs, UBS, Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Italy’s Mediobanca have been hired to underwrite the potential fundraising — which will be put to a board vote this week.