Tenon weighs possible sale as strategic review attracts buying interest
The company said the review was running to plan.
The company said the review was running to plan.
Tenon [NZX: RBC], which sells wood mouldings in the US, is looking at a possible sale after a strategic review to boost shareholder value attracted buyer interest.
The Taupo-based company said the review, managed by Deutsche Craigs and Deutsche Bank, was running to plan and, since its announcement, it had received 'in-bound' interest from undisclosed third parties.
"We now need to investigate that further, to determine whether a sales path provides the best risk-adjusted value outcome for shareholders," chairman Luke Moriarty said in a statement. "Accordingly we have asked Deutsche Bank to proceed with just such a process."
Tenon hired the investment bank in August to conduct a strategic review with the goal to come up with a "risk-adjusted path most likely to close the share price value gap" and has previously discussed the potential to list Tenon on a US stock market, where it has competitor peers whose shares trade at higher multiples than Tenon has achieved on the NZX.
After more than a decade of losses, Tenon last year turned a profit as the US home-building sector began to recover, and announced its first dividend in 17 years in August. The company derives 90% of its revenue from the US, where home construction fell into a prolonged trough after the 2006 sub-prime mortgage crisis and subsequent global financial crisis. The rebound in the US housing market, where a builders' confidence index is at a nine-year high and new home permits are at an eight-year high, and the depreciation in the New Zealand dollar against the US currency, boosted Tenon's income in the 2015 financial year.
The company is gunning for growth in full-year earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation of 53%, accelerating from earnings growth of 18% to $US13 million in the year ended June 30.
Tenon shares last traded at $2.45 and have more than doubled over the past two years, having dropped as low as 50c in the late 2000s.
(BusinessDesk)
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