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IPO markets in Asia Pacific had their best week in two years after Chinese refiner Sinopec Group's engineering unit and a Macquarie Group Ltd-linked trust raised a combined $2.9 billion on Thursday. This week's three large IPOs, including one from state-owned China Galaxy Securities Co Ltd, all priced at the lower end of their indicative price ranges as investors seek bargain-priced deals and companies look for first-day pops on their debuts.
The unit of Sinopec Group, Asia's largest refiner, raised $1.8 billion in Hong Kong's biggest IPO in almost six months, one day after China Galaxy's $1.1 billion deal. Asian Pay Television Trust (APTT), which owns TBC Group, Taiwan's third-largest cable TV operator, tapped the market in Singapore for $1.14 billion, in a deal that relied on investor demand for high-yield securities such as business trusts and real estate investment trusts (REITs).
"Ultimately the appeal for investors is the kind of yield and what the management is doing to enhance the yield," said Roger Tan, head of SIAS Research in Singapore. The debuts of Sinopec Engineering, APTT and China Galaxy, are set to be bellwethers for a slew of offerings in the works, including an up to $600 million IPO by Langham Hospitality Investments and a $1 billion offering by NW Hotel Investments, which is part of New World Development.
Hong Kong, the top global IPO destination for two years straight in 2009 and 2010, has lingered in 13th place in global rankings so far this year behind countries like Iraq and New Zealand, with $1.1 billion worth of deals before the two large offerings by China Galaxy and Sinopec Engineering. The two deals will vault Hong Kong to third among global exchanges in IPO volumes as of mid-May, behind New York and Sao Paulo's Bovespa. Sinopec Engineering (Group) Co Ltd sold 1.33 billion new shares at HK$10.5 each, said IFR, a Thomson Reuters publication.
The company launched the deal on May 6, with an indicative range of HK$9.80 to HK$13.10 per share. On Wednesday it narrowed the range to HK$10.50-11 per share. Sinopec Engineering secured commitments for $350 million worth of shares from seven investors including logistics and transportation company China Shipping (Hong Kong) Holdings and units of China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp.
The company plans to use most of the IPO proceeds to support its engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) services business and set up six research and development centers in mainland China. It is controlled by China Petrochemical Corp, the state-owned integrated oil behemoth also known as Sinopec Group which is also the parent of China Petroleum and Chemical Corp. Citic Securities, J.P. Morgan and UBS were hired as sponsors of the offering, with Goldman Sachs also acting as a joint global co-ordinator on the deal. A group of nine other banks will also help manage the IPO as joint bookrunners.
Asian Pay Television Trust has garnered some high-profile cornerstone investors including Prudential's Eastspring Investments, George Soros' Quantum Partners, Och-Ziff Capital Management Group LLC and Neuberger Berman. The two Macquarie funds that own TBC are selling most of their holdings in the deal, reducing their combined ownership to 3 percent, according to the prospectus.
It is forecasting a yield of up to 7.3 percent for the year ending December 2013 and 8.25 percent for 2014, the prospectus said. Singapore could see at least two more large REIT listings in the months ahead and a spate of smaller deals. Property firm Overseas Union Enterprise (OUE) could raise $800 million in a listing of a hospitality real estate investment trust, while Singapore Press Holdings plans to list a property trust that could raise up to $1 billion.

Copyright Reuters, 2013

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