Synlait Milk considers IPO as equity market here heats up
Majority owner Bright Dairy gave no details about a potential IPO size in a statement to the Shanghai Stock Exchange.
Majority owner Bright Dairy gave no details about a potential IPO size in a statement to the Shanghai Stock Exchange.
Synlait Milk, the dairy company controlled by China's Bright Dairy & Food, is considering an initial public offering in New Zealand three years after abandoning such a capital raising because of lack of investor demand.
Bright Dairy emerged with a 51 percent stake in 2010, paying $82 million, and said at the time it would consider a share market listing in three to five years. Bright Dairy would be entitled to new shares to retain its holding, it said back then. Synlait Ltd, associated with the company's founders, owns the rest.
Bright Dairy gave no details about the potential size of an IPO in a statement to the Shanghai Stock Exchange, Bloomberg News reported.
A spokesman for Synlait Milk says the company will make a statement shortly.
Synlait processes more than 500 million litres of milk a year. In December it announced a maiden profit for the year to July 31, 2012, of $6.3 million.
Wary of offerings
Equity investors were wary of stock offerings in the wake of the global financial crisis, which dried up credit markets. More recently, a host of new issues have been flagged as coming to market, including SLI Systems, Wynyard and Serko, a technology company.
The market has been buoyed by the float of state-owned Mighty River Power and the prospect of another SOE coming to market later this year, while the benchmark NZX 50 Index has been charting record highs this month.
Last week, Synlait Milk said it was investing $15 million to upgrade its Special Milks Drier at Dunsandel as it looks to further tap into the $15 billion a year demand for infant formula in China.
Chief executive John Penno said the decision to invest in the high-value ingredient had been stimulated by contracts with eight significant customers for infant formula including YinQiao Xi'An, the largest dairy manufacturer in north western China, Synlait Milk's cornerstone shareholder Bright Dairy and A2 Corporation, which will soon launch is own a2 infant formula in China.
(BusinessDesk)