Evergrande Seeks Up to $780 Million in Share Sale, E-Mail Says By Bei Hu
Oct. 19 (Bloomberg) -- Evergrande Real Estate Group Ltd., the largest Chinese developer by third-quarter sales, plans to raise as much as HK$6.05 billion ($780 million) in a Hong Kong initial public offering, according to a sale document.
The Guangzhou-based developer and shareholders are offering a combined 1.51 billion shares at
HK$3.00 to HK$4.00 each, according to the document e-mailed to fund managers.
Evergrande is reviving a share sale after volatile stock markets prompted the company to abort an attempt to raise as much as HK$16.6 billion in March 2008 in what would have been the largest Hong Kong IPO by a Chinese property company at the time. The developer is joining competitors including Excellence Real Estate Group Ltd. and Yuzhou Properties Co. in tapping this year’s stock rally to raise money.
Evergrande spokeswoman Li Chenxi wasn’t immediately available for comment outside of Chinese office hours.
Joseph Lau, chairman of Chinese Estate Holdings Ltd., and Cheng Yu-tung, the billionaire behind Chow Tai Fook Enterprises Ltd., will each take $50 million worth of shares as cornerstone investors in Evergrande’s IPO, the e-mail said. Cornerstone investors are guaranteed shares in an IPO in return for a commitment not to sell them for a number of months.
Of the shares on offer, 900 million are newly issued, representing a 6 percent stake in Evergrande, the e-mail said.
The high end of the range values the company at
6.6 times its 2010 earnings as estimated by banks involved in the sale, or
39 percent less than its discounted net asset value for next year. Bank of America Merrill Lynch, BOC International (Holdings) Ltd., Credit Suisse Group AG and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. are managing the sale. Final pricing is tentatively scheduled for Oct. 29 with trading to start Nov. 5, the e-mail said.
Evergrande beat domestic rivals in terms of third-quarter revenue and area sold, according to a statement from CRIC (China) Information Technology Co. CRIC didn’t give Evergrande’s ranking for the same period a year earlier.
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