Malaysia’s IJM board calls Sunway’s $2.8 billion takeover bid ‘not fair’, urges rejection

Industry:    3 days ago

Malaysia’s IJM Corp said on Friday its board has urged shareholders to reject a roughly 11 ​billion ringgit ($2.80 billion) takeover offer from conglomerate ‌Sunway, after an independent adviser said the offer price was “not fair and not reasonable.”

M&A Securities, an independent adviser to IJM, ​said the offer price of 3.15 ringgit per ​IJM share represents a discount of between ⁠46.1% and 51.4% to the estimated value of IJM ​shares, based on a sum-of-parts (SOPV) valuation, according to IJM’s ​exchange filing. This approach tallies the aggregate valuation of a company’s different business segments.

IJM’s board, concurring with M&A Securities, has unanimously determined ​the offer to be neither fair nor reasonable ​and accordingly urges shareholders to reject it.

The offer price represents a ‌14.5% ⁠premium to IJM’s last closing price at the time the proposal was announced.

A merger would combine two sizeable Malaysian builders and property players, at a time when ​the sector faces ​increased competition ⁠for scale, financing, and advanced technical capabilities to secure large infrastructure and technology-based ​projects.

If the transaction goes through, it would ​rank ⁠as Asia’s fourth-largest deal this year, excluding Japan, according to financial services provider Dealogic’s data.

Sunway did not immediately ⁠respond ​to a request for comment ​from Reuters.

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