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Jun 14, 2022 (Gmt+09:00)
South Korean private equity firms that plan to inject a total of 1.2 trillion won ($1 billion) into SK Ecoplant Co. are having a hard time raising the money as domestic pension funds, the main source of their funding, are turning a cold shoulder on pre-IPOs.
The unexpected IPO cancellations last month by two other arms of the country’s No. 2 conglomerate -- SK Shieldus Co. and One Store Co. – seemed to serve as a wake-up call for institutional investors, who had rushed to IPO candidates on expectations of windfalls.
SK Shieldus’ IPO flop was the crucial reason not to invest in SK Ecoplant, according to multiple sources who had reviewed pre-IPO investment in the construction and waste recycling company.
“It seems like the market had been in a waking dream,” said a Korean retirement fund official.
The aborted IPOs of the security services provider and the homegrown app store highlighted the growing redemption risks for unlisted companies. Also, they added to doubts over SK Group Chairman Chey Tae-won's watchword “financial story,” for which the group called PE firms its essential partners.
SK ECOPLANT
SK Ecoplant is selling a combined 400 billion won in preferred shares to Korea Investment Securities Co. and Glenwood Credit, on top of the 800 billion won it is set to raise from other domestic PE firms.
Its post-investment valuation is estimated at 4 trillion won, or 94,700 won per share. That is less than half of the 10 trillion won the company targets for its IPO, which is likely to take place in the second half of next year.
If it goes public at its targeted valuation, its pre-IPO investors are supposed to pocket about twice their investment.
Despite the company's offer for an additional cut in its new share issuance price by about 10%, however, some limited partners demanded further strengthening of downside protection, but finally withdrew their investment plan.
For the 800 billion won fundraising, NH Investment & Securities Co. dropped out of a consortium with Seoul-based Brain Asset Management, which planned to inject a combined 200 billion won into SK Ecoplant.
SK Ecoplant's pre-IPO fundraising plan | |
Investors | Investment amount |
Premier Partners | 280 billion won |
Ium Private Equity | 200 billion won |
*Brain Asset Management | 200 billion won |
Find Value Asset Management | 120 billion won |
Korea Investment Securities | 200 billion won |
Glenwood Credit | 200 billion won |
Note: *Brain Asset had planned to raise the fund jointly with NH Investment & Securities |
BACK TO BASICS
Reduced expected returns on the back of interest rate rises pushed institutional investors to get back to the basics: the company’s main business. Amid concerns over overstated PE valuations, they are also scaling back new PE investments.
For leveraged buyouts, they need to pay interest rates of about 6.5% for five-year loans, versus 3.9% last year.
"Investors began to review the contractual terms (of PE funding) in more detail," said a brokerage company analyst covering holding companies.
For SK On Co., the world's No. 5 electric vehicle battery maker has seen its pre-IPO funding for around 3 trillion won delayed.
Its shortlisted investors in SK On -- BlackRock, The Carlyle Group, KKR and Singapore's GIC – took a step back to weigh the growing risks of battery makers on the back of soaring raw material prices and subdued investor sentiment, according to sources last April.
In the run-up to its IPO application, SK Shieldus hired Morgan Stanley, the most expensive underwriter in South Korea, to raise between 300 billion and 400 billion won in pre-IPO funding.
However, Morgan Stanley failed to drum up interest for the country's No. 2 security services provider, which estimated its corporate value at 4 trillion won, far above its bigger domestic rival S-1 Corp.’s market value of 2.6 trillion won.
Write to Jun-Ho Cha at chacha@hankyung.com
Yeonhee Kim edited this article
May 06, 2022 (Gmt+09:00)
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