bullish

Last Week in Event SPACE: Infigen, Huadian Fuxin, Melco, Evergrande, Hitachi, Sing Air, DP World

447 Views07 Jun 2020 07:59
SUMMARY

Last Week in Event SPACE ...

  • Plus, other events, CCASS movements and Mood Spins.

(This insight covers specific insights & comments involving Stubs, Pairs, Arbitrage, share Classifications, and Events - or SPACE - in the past week)


M&A - ASIA

Infigen Energy (IFN AU) (Mkt Cap: $0.5bn; Liquidity: $2mn)

UAC Energy (75% owned by AC Energy, which is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Ayala Corporation (AC PM), and 25% owned by UPC Renewables) has launched a Takeover Bid on an unsolicited basis for Infigen at A$0.80/stapled security. The stake claimed and filed is 12.82% which is 9.9% outright and a Total Return Swap of 2.92%. Interestingly, The Children's Investment Fund (TCI) announced earlier the same day of the Offer that it had raised its stake to 33.09% from 32.62%. TCI was, according to the AFR yesterday, widely tipped to be a seller at the right price.

  • This is a starting salvo. How power/energy markets, rates, volatility, politics evolve may determine whether there is market appetite to push it near-term. Travis expects this goes to FIRB first, and takes six months. I expect that any negotiation which happens between UAC and Infigen management will be slow-walked because there is no need to get agreement at A$0.90 before FIRB comes out.
  • This asset is sub-scale, and sub-scale assets trade cheaper than large scale assets. This could be an attractive target for someone like Shell to bolt on to their Erm Power Ltd (EPW AU) acquisition of late 2019. They want "green cred" and adding this would give it some. Brookfield sold in February at a price 10% lower. That suggests that after two years, they could not get traction with management, or did not feel a bid was likely to be successful. Travis expects they were low-balling their bid.
  • This stock may be "dead money" near-term, but on the whole Travis would rather be long than not.

Huadian Fuxin Energy Corp (816 HK) (Mkt Cap: $2.6bn; Liquidity: $3mn)

Following the suspension of its shares on the 28 May, HEFC announced its major shareholder, Huadian with 62.76% - via wholly-owned listed vehicle Fujian Huadian Furui (the Offeror) - has tabled a privatisation Offer by way of a Merger by Absorption. The Offer price of $2.50/share, is a 65.56% premium to last close and 85.34% premium to the average closing for the 90 days prior to the Offer announcement. The Offer Price is Final. A final dividend of RMB0.054/share (~HK$0.0587/share) will also be added to the consideration price. Unlike recent merger by absorptions, there is no tendering condition. I have no idea why.

  • If simply pegging to windpower and clean energy peers, HFEC's Offer price is fair. The pushback is that the entire peer basket is off 12% YTD. Dissension rights are discussed in HFEC's AoA. However, there is no administrative guidance on the substantive as well as procedural rules as to how the “fair price” will be determined under PRC Laws.
  • Note - there are pre-conditions with respect to approvals from NDRC, Ministry of Commerce and SAFE. The ultimate Offeror is Huadian, an SOE controlled by SASAC. Apart from possible timing delays, these approvals should all be forthcoming.

Hitachi Ltd (6501 JP) (Mkt Cap: $33bn; Liquidity: $130mn)

After the close on Friday, Hitachi released its full-year earnings (with a news release, presentation, and supplemental materials). It also released an update on Progress of the Mid-Term Management Plan, with a webcast and a presentation deck. The contents surprised even Travis. He did not expect to be so underwhelmed.

  • There was no comment about Hitachi Transport System (9086 JP) or Hitachi Capital (8586 JP) and there are ongoing investor questions about the former.
  • It is at least a year, and probably more like three, given that the COVID-19 situation will effectively contaminate this year, and to some extent the following year, before a really solid sale process can start for the two remaining listed subs.
  • If indeed the two consolidated listed subs end up for sale, Travis would expect a beauty contest for buyers like occurred for Hitachi Chemical, Hitachi Koki, and others. And those sale processes got great results for both Hitachi and minorities. For that, even if a sale is a few years down the road, any deep dip on the two stocks due to market selloff or flow patterns would be an opportunity to buy the dip. I have my doubts that they will both be world-beating enterprises by the time they are let free from the Hitachi name, but Travis expects they will be worthwhile enough that buyers will compete, especially for HCM.

Zenith Energy Ltd/AU (ZEN AU) (Mkt Cap: $0.1bn; Liquidity: $1mn)

Back on the 6 March, remote power generator Zenith Energy announced an Offer, by way of a Scheme, from Elemental Infrastructure BidCo, a Pacific Equity Partners (PEP) entity, at $1.01/share in cash, a 45.3% premium to last close. The Offer had been unanimously recommended by Zenith’s board of directors, and valued Zenith’s equity at ~A$150mn (US$98mn) and an enterprise value of ~$250mn.

  • On the 6 April, an initial substantial shareholder announcement (15.45%) was made by Apex Opportunities, an entity controlled by Infrastructure Specialist Asset Management, a trustee of Diversified Infrastructure Trust/Infrastructure Capital Group (ICG) and OPSEU Pension Plant Trust Fund (OPTrust). This stake was bumped to 17.61% on the 22 April.
  • On the 6 May, PEP noted Apex's holding, and that it would be challenging to implement the Scheme if Apex were to vote against the resolutions. So PEP reached out to Apex such that Apex's consortium members could take an equity position in the Elemental/PEP group holding structure. If an agreement could be reached, a revised proposal would be tabled.
  • And so it was on the 29 May, Zenith announced Apex had joined PEP/Elemental's proposed Scheme. There are no other material changes to the Scheme implementation deed announced on the 6 March. This was previously viewed as a clean takeover situation. You have an agreed deal, a solid premium to last close, together with major shareholders support - albeit with a rollover for key shareholders. I expect this deal to get up. But it is not a particularly liquid arb situation.

Onevue Holdings (OVH AU) (Mkt Cap: $0.1bn; Liquidity: <$1mn)

On 1st June 2020, Australian financial markets software company Iress Ltd (IRE AU) signed an scheme implementation agreement to acquire 100% of OneVue valuing the company at a market cap of A$107mn. The Acquirer announced they will also be simultaneously raising AS$170mn of equity but the OneVue Deal will not be conditional on financing. The Deal currently requires approvals from Target Shareholders and regulatory authorities. The Offer Price is A$0.40/share and the consideration will be in the form of cash.

  • In 2019, OneVue sold its trustee business Diversa to financial technology and infrastructure company Sargon for a consideration of $43mn. Out of this, A$31mn was to be settled by Nov 2019 but Sargon failed to make this payment. In January 2019, Sargon went into receivership forcing OneVue to write down a significant portion of the money owed to them by Sargon.
  • This Deal comes at a premium of 66.7% to the pre-announcement closing price of A$0.24. It is also 281.0% higher than the all-time low of A$0.11 reached in March 2020. There is some uncertainty regarding the potential recovery of Sargon receivables and the restriction on dividends/buybacks makes it unattractive to hold the stock. However, the Deal requires approval from at least 75% of votes cast. Janaghan Jeyakumar feels the outcome of the shareholder vote may depend somewhat on the progress in recovering the Sargon receivables between now and the Scheme Meeting in early-September.
  • This is not a large deal. ADV is about US$300k which is actually on the high side given how private the shareholder register appears to be. The spread is wide and the deal timeline is short but there is some uncertainty to this deal because of the low price. Janaghan expects this to trade with a lot of noise until there is more clarity on the Sargon Receivables. Until then, we recommend avoiding this situation considering the large gap risk (~35% fall to pre-announcement close).
(link to Janaghan's insight: OneVue-Iress: Australian Deal Trading Wide)

Metlifecare Ltd (MET NZ) (Mkt Cap: $0.6bn; Liquidity: $4mn)

The High Court of New Zealand passed down its decision, clarifying the dispute regarding the validity of the notice to terminate the Scheme Implementation Agreement entered with Asia Pacific Village Group Limited (APVG/EQT) should be resolved before MET shareholders vote on the Scheme plan. The High Court decision provides no insight or context as to whether the termination of the SIA was valid/correct, or not, in the eyes of law. This decision by the judge is purely a judgment on whether the Scheme meeting should be held before the outcome of the litigation.

  • In the interim, MET will hold a shareholder meeting mid-July to seek a formal endorsement from shareholders on whether to continue, or not, with its legal action challenging APVG's termination of the SIA. MET anticipates dispatching the Notice of Meeting next week. This meeting is MET's own doing, not a requirement from the Court. The endorsement may require a special resolution - i.e. a 75% approval - for the litigation to continue. No doubt shareholders will overwhelmingly support the litigation - and why wouldn't they, given the substantial premium over the price at which the company’s shares are currently trading at.
  • Separately, and as previously noted, MET had filed a Statement of Claim in the High Court on the 15 May, seeking orders to compel APVG/EQT to fulfill their contractual obligations under the SIA, The High Court has set an expedited court timetable for the dispute, with the trial scheduled to commence on 23 November 2020. A decision may be available in late January 2021. I argued (so far, unsuccessfully to date) it would be challenging for EQT to get out of the MAC carve-out. I expect the judge's final decision to side with MET and therefore, move to put the Scheme to a shareholder vote.
  • Seeking endorsement from shareholders on whether to proceed with litigation may have a small net negative impact. Given this is a long-dated deal, some active investors may trim positions. It is possible APVG/EQT may face reputational damage dragging out this process, and potentially seek a compromise. I remain positive this deal will get up.

Kingswood Enterprise Co., Ltd. (600255 CH) (Mkt Cap: $0.3bn; Liquidity: $6mn)

Wuhu Chuheng Investment, the second-largest shareholder in Kingswood with 2.30% of shares out, is seeking to raise its stake to 15.00% via a partial Tender Offer, in an RMB269.6mn (~US$38mn) transaction. The Tender Offer is RMB1.20/share, a ~13% premium to the undisturbed close. The minimum pro-ration is 13.05%. Sans a punchy premium, the low pro-ration appears unattractive. However, recent partial Offers in China have shown remarkably high pro-rations. That's worth a second look. And Kingswood is relatively liquid.

STUBS

I see Melco's discount to NAV at ~28%, bang in line with its 12-month average. But it's Lawrence Ho's insider buying that is worthy of a discussion. According to the HKEx, Lawrence has added 2.06% in Melco or 31.5mn shares year-to-date, taking his direct take in Melco to 57.95% and elevating his look-thru stake in MLCO to 33%. Technically, >30% gives a shareholder "control" in the company - largely premised on the fact 30% is the takeover trigger threshold, and is sufficient to block an unsolicited takeover offer. Therefore, Lawrence could collapse the Melco Holdco structure and maintain control.

  • As discussed in StubWorld: Melco Steps Back From Crown; Ayala Hands Over Control Of Manila Water, Melco stub ops are largely inconsequential/immaterial, encompassing various "perpetual" trademarks and goodwill (after Melco gained control of MLCO), the Jumbo restaurant in Aberdeen (est. at $370mn for its 86.678% stake - perhaps a lot less since the restaurant is currently closed), and slot machines and a social gaming developer Entertainment Gaming Asia (implied value of HK$265mn).
  • Collapsing the Holdco structure? Not dissimilar to my Hang Lung (10 HK) commentary last week (StubWorld: Hang Lung Group (10 HK) Is A Buy), this could be achieved via a takeover of Melco (giving Lawrence majority control), in-specie-ing MLCO (giving Lawrence 33% direct into MLCO) or a reverse takeover of Melco by MLCO, perhaps by a scrip/cash offer, wherein Lawrence would opt for the scrip only. This may give Lawrence a higher direct % into MLCO, depending on the scrip ration and who takes up the scrip/cash option. Lawrence would need to abstain from voting in a takeover of Melco - and more likely abstain in a reverse takeover.
  • I would take advantage of any weakness in Melco to build a position. Lawrence was okay with buying at a more expensive implied stub than where it is now. It is worth noting the acquisition of shares Melco by Lawrence this year was primarily done at an implied stub higher the current level.

EVENTS

Evergrande Real Estate Group (3333 HK) (Mkt Cap: $30bn; Liquidity: $38mn)

Evergrande commenced buying back stock for the first time in two years on 4 May 2020. At the time, because of various options which had been exercised before their expiry (since the end of the buyback in 2018), they had the ability to buy a certain number of shares. The shareholder permission granting of a general mandate to the Directors to "repurchase Shares not exceeding 10% of the existing issued share capital of the Company at the date of passing this resolution."

  • But that wasn't the actual flexibility. The actual limit was closer to 208mm shares because of the Exchange rule limiting them to a float of 22.04% or more. As of the previous Friday's close, that room to repurchase shares was halved at 103mm shares. The first half took 17 trading days out of the 18 since they started buying back shares. The pace slowed a bit after the initial flurry of larger orders, but even if they average 5 million shares/day, they will reach their limit by end-June.
  • Travis expects shorting near the tail end of the buyback is worthwhile as I expect property stimulus may remain a zone where China policymakers don't yet want to go because of the ease in which it expands debt, household leverage, and high interest rate equity check borrowing, which causes financial hardship unless property prices go up forever.
  • This insight is labelled BEARISH because I expect sometime in the next two weeks will be the time to sell one's long and/or short the shares. I believe there is still a little room for the company to push before those who would short will be happy to add marginal risk.

(link to Travis' insight: Evergrande (3333 HK) Buyback Half Done)


Singapore Airlines (SIA SP) (Mkt Cap: $3.7bn; Liquidity: $35mn)

SIA has now announced the distribution of the rights and the rights not taken up. A surprising number of rights were NOT taken up. The announcement does not say the division of the distribution between those who will be allocated the excess rights in order to cover oddlots and those which will be distributed to Excess Rights Applications. The likelihood of another 14% gain on SIA shares is now sharply diminished. This is because there is no V-shaped recovery in the shares to come. Arithmetically, with 150% more shares, EPS will fall 60% on a pro-forma basis. That is not a recipe for seeing the shares at their old price. People looking at charts need to not look at stock price but look at EV "price". Another 10% higher on the shares would get Forward EV to the same level as calendar Q4 2019.

  • Near-term? there may be selling pressure. If you have shares or borrow and are inclined to sell to buy back, Travis expect there is an opportunity to do so on 3-5 June. Long-term? there should be no V-shaped rebound. The shares are substantially de-levered from before. That means a lot less EPS and theoretically, a lot lower capital structure volatility on a gross basis (shares should be less volatile than before. Medium-term? Travis would not be surprised to see the shares run a bit too far because float is small, there are still shorts, borrow will become easier next week again, and coming out of lockdown will mean people will feel better about doing things.
  • Comparatively? Cathay Pacific Airways (293 HK) and others which have not raised capital are still operating under the old share price paradigm. Theoretically, their shares should be more volatile than SIA's. That introduces theoretical beta vs realised beta problems for those who manage risk. Cathay still needs capital. SIA doesn't, and can get another S$6+bn from Temasek over the next year in the form of MCBs. And Cathay still needs capital and will likely still get diluted from here.
  • And about the MCBs? Something of a disaster of an offering. Out of S$3.496bn, only S$145mm will be tradable. It is possible that these have a very lonely life on the exchange. It also means that aggressive market-makers will be able to trade these at the bond equivalent spread of 10 cents on exchange.

(link to Travis' insight: Singapore Air - The Rights Distribution - Vol Is Your Friend)


China Pacific Insurance (2601 HK) (Mkt Cap: $3.7bn; Liquidity: $35mn)

CPI released an announcement that it had received permission from the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) to issue up to but not more than 125,734,000 GDRs which corresponds to a newly issued number of A-Shares of China Pacific Insurance (Group) Co., (601601 CH) (CPIC) of not more than 628,670,000. That comes to an underlying value of US$2.5bn or so, though one might expect a decent discount at issue. The company also announced a cornerstone agreement with Swiss Re agreeing to buy a number of shares which would not exceed 1.5% of the resulting post-offering outstanding number of shares. Required remaining approvals are the FCA and the London Stock Exchange.

  • The Trade? Bid for and get LSE-listed GDRs of CPIC, then sell the A-share equivalent (GDR ratio-adjusted) of what you can buy on Shanghai. If you did not get enough, buy more on the market on the LSE once they start trading, then sell a commensurate quantity in Shanghai. If your A-share portfolio is 3% CPIC, and you can buy at a 15% discount, you will earn 45bp outperformance on your entire portfolio just from this trade. There is no other FX to hedge. It is a USD-denominated A-share. It will deliver an amount in RMB equal to the CPIC share price.
  • At the end of 120 days when the GDRs become fungible, check with your broker how they will be converted (the brokers will probably either sell A-shares VWAP or something similar, but check the method they will "price" your GDRs at), and then do the opposite. If the broker sells the A-shares VWAP on Day X, then you should buy A-shares on Day X, VWAP. The reason you do this is that the conversion the broker will do is not a 'real' conversion. You don't get A-shares. You get the money from them selling A-shares on your behalf. To keep the exposure, you need to buy A-shares while they are selling them.
  • The other trade? If you are a hedge fund and want to buy a large block of stock cheap, and you like the insurance sector as a whole, buy a block and you are long a slow-rolling block trade where the discount will shrink over the next four months, but you may not make anything just from your long position in the GDR. But you have a bigger buffer against loss. It is effectively a "cornerstone" buy of a block of A-shares where you are locked up for just over four months. But it's a big enough discount to care.

(link to Travis' insight: CPIC (601601 SH / 2601 HK) - GDR Issuance Incoming!)


SK Biopharmaceuticals (BIO SK) could reopen the Korean IPO market with its listing that is expected later this month. With 19.58m shares being offered in the IPO at a price range of KRW 36,000 - KRW 49,000 per share, there is a possibility that the stock could get fast entry into the Korea Stock Exchange Kospi 200 Index (KOSPI2 INDEX) and other global indices bringing in passive flows and supporting the stock price. In SK Biopharmaceuticals - Fast Index Entry Possibilities, Brian Freitas takes a look at a few details of the IPO and assesses the likelihood of the stock getting fast entry into indices that have significant assets benchmarked to them.

M&A - EUROPE

Masmovil Ibercom (MAS SM) (Mkt Cap: $3.4bn; Liquidity: $17mn)

A trio of PE funds - KKR, Cinven, and Providence - have launched a takeover bid to acquire a majority stake in Spanish telecom operator MásMóvil Ibercom, S.A. If the Deal goes through, all three PE firms will hold an equal stake in the company. The Offer Price is EUR22.50/share (20.2% premium to the undisturbed) valuing the company at a market cap of ~EUR3.0bn and an enterprise value of EUR 5.011bn. Providence is currently the second-largest shareholder with (9.16%) and including them, shareholders collectively holding 29.56% have agreed to sell.

  • MásMóvil has been a unique success story in an over-saturated and fiercely competitive European Telecom Industry. The company has disrupted larger competitors by providing low-cost bundles of mobile phone and internet services and also has inorganically strengthened its market position by acquiring brands such as Yoigo, Pepephone, Lyca and Lebara in the last few years. However, the company will need more financial resources to remain competitive against the other local players such as Telefónica, Orange, Vodafone, and Euskaltel. This Deal will probably give them that financial backing.
  • The Deal has a minimum acceptance condition of 50% and MásMóvil's shares are currently trading above terms at EUR23.18. Janaghan feels there is some fundamental backing for an improvement to the current offer - either in the form of a bump from the current bidders or an overbid from other competitive bidders who could potentially be one of MásMóvil's rivals. MásMóvil has a wholesale agreement with Orange to resell services using Orange’s Spanish network and this can probably attract strategic buyers who could be interested in unlocking synergies. Janaghan recommends buying in the low EUR 23s.
  • Separately Jesus Rodriguez Aguilar has a target price of EUR 26.

M&A - NORTH AMERICA

Cineplex Inc (CGX CN) (Mkt Cap: $0.7bn; Liquidity: $8mn)

On June 1st, Cineplex provided an update on the status of Investment Canada review in connection to the Cineplex-Cineworld Deal - officially, the Deal is still alive. With less than a month to the Outside Date (30th June), the Deal remains conditional mainly on the ICA Approval, fulfilment of certain covenants in the arrangement agreement (SEDAR link), and Cineplex maintaining its debt level under C$725mn (the "Debt Condition").
  • Janaghan feels the ICA approval might depend on Cineworld coming to terms with the competition authority on certain matters. The reason for extension of the ICA approval deadline from June 1st to June 15th is not explicitly stated on Cineplex's announcement. We feel that this could be related to concern of potential closure of screens and the consequent loss of employment that could result from this transaction.
  • With shareholders of both companies having voted in favour of the Deal, the Cineworld's board of directors is bound by their good faith obligations in the Arrangement Agreement which means IF ICA Approval is granted AND all other conditions including the Debt Condition is met, we feel that it will be highly unlikely for Cineworld to be able to walk away without having to face a lawsuit and discovery.
  • If ICA Approval is granted on time, there could possibly be some short-lived excitement around the share price. This presents some trading opportunities for punters in the run up to the ICA Approval deadline - June 15th. If you expect short-lived excitement, but eventual deal break, you could make a quick bet on buying to the upside, or you could borrow shares and wait for the stock to pop then short-sell it, but if you do the latter, you should be very sure this deal does not get renegotiated. For fundamental bets on the recovery of Cineplex, wait for the Deal to break and if it does break, buy if the shares fall well below the estimated range for the theoretical break price.
(link to Janaghan's insight: Cineplex-Cineworld: The Final Countdown)

M&A - MIDDLE EAST

DP World (DPW DU) (Mkt Cap: $13bn; Liquidity: $11mn)
DP World announced that it had received a Court Date for the hearing to sanction the Scheme. That court date is 16 June. There are no market holidays between here and there. This remains the easiest short-term risk arb deal in the world right now. Travis doesn't understand why more people haven't been doing this trade. There is still juice. If you buy Sunday at the closing offer, and pay 15bp commission, the return is 127bp for less than a month in USD. Easy money is not always easy to find. Get involved.

INDEX RE-BALS

The Stock Exchange of Thailand (SET) will announce the results of the semi-annual review of the SET50 index in June and the changes will be effective from 1 July 2020. Passive funds and index arb desks will need to trade at (or by) the close on 30 June 2020. In SET50 Rebalance Preview: The Final Cut, Brian expects TTW Pcl (TTW TB) and Banpu Power PCL (BPP TB) will be included in the SET50 index replacing Banpu Public (BANPU TB) and WHA Corp Pcl (WHA TB).


STOXX Ltd., the operator of Qontigo's index business has announced the changes to the STOXX Europe 600 index for the upcoming review. The rebalance will be effective as of the opening of European markets on 22 June and passive funds will need to trade at the close on 19 June. There are 21 inclusions and exclusions in this review. As discussed by Brian in STOXX Europe 600 Index Review: Adds Outperforming Deletes, based on passive assets tracking the STOXX Europe 600 index and the associated size and sector indices, there is significant volume to trade on quite a few stocks. The adds have significantly outperformed the deletes over the last year, with the bulk of the outperformance coming over the last few months


FTSE Russell has just announced the results of the June index review for the FTSE China A50 Index (XIN9I INDEX). The next rebalance will be effective 22 June and passive funds will need to trade at the close on 19 June. As discussed by Brian in FTSE China A50 Index Review - Couple of Changes, there are 2 additions and 2 deletions in the June review. The additions are Beijing-Shanghai High Speed Railway (601816 CH) and WuXi AppTec Co Ltd (603259 CH) and the deletions are 360 Security Technology Inc. (601360 CH) and Boe Technology Group (000725 CH).


For FTSE China 50 index, as discussed by Brian in FTSE China 50 Index Review - Alibaba, Hansoh Pharma, Alibaba Health Included, there are 3 additions and 3 deletions in the June review. The additions are Alibaba Group (9988 HK), Alibaba Health Information Technology (241 HK) and Hansoh Pharmaceutical (3692 HK), while the deletions are Shenzhou Intl Group Holdings (2313 HK), New China Life Insurance (1336 HK) and China Communications Construction (1800 HK).


For the FTSE Straits Times Index (STI) (STI INDEX), as discussed by Brian in STI Index Review - And Ironic It Is!, there is 1 addition Mapletree Industrial Trust (MINT SP) and 1 deletion Singapore Press Holdings (SPH SP) in this review. Brian estimates more than 1.5 days of ADV to buy on MINT and around 0.9 days of 'normal' ADV to sell on SPH.


For the Kuala Lumpur Composite Index (Klci) (FBMKLCI INDEX), as discussed by Brian in KLCI Index Review - Liquidity Play, there are 2 additions, Telekom Malaysia (T MK) and KLCCP Stapled (KLCCSS MK), and 2 deletions Malaysia Airports Hldgs (MAHB MK) and Ammb Holdings (AMM MK) in this review. There are significant days to trade on KLCCP and AMMB and the stocks could move from now to implementation day.


STOXX announced the results of the Deutscher Aktienindex (DAX) index review. The constituent changes will be effective from 22 June and the rebalancing trades will need to be done at the close on 19 June. As discussed by Brian in DAX Index Review - BIG Impact on Deutsche Wohnen, as expected, Deutsche Wohnen Ag (DWNI GR) has been included in the index and Deutsche Lufthansa Ag (LHA GR) has been excluded. This marks the end of a 32 year stay in the index Deutsche Lufthansa - the stock was part of the initial DAX index composition from 30 December 1987.

OTHER M&A & EVENT UPDATES

CCASS

My ongoing series flags large moves (~10%) in CCASS holdings over the past week or so, moves which are often outside normal market transactions. These may be indicative of share pledges. Or potential takeovers. Or simply help understand volume swings.

Often these moves can easily be explained - the placement of new shares, rights issue, movements subsequent to a takeover, lock-up expiry, amongst others. For those mentioned below, I could not find an obvious reason for the CCASS move.

Name

%chg

Into

Out of

Chuan Holdings (1420 HK) 51.05%ExcelPacific Found
UTS (6113 HK)14.62%CitiRHB
Baguio Green (1397 HK) 62.65%HSBCOutside CCASS
Wine's Link (8509 HK)42.00%HSBCBNP
AL Group (8360 HK)24.20%ChaoshangOutside CCASS
Panda Green (686 HK) 32.01%HSBCOutside CCASS
Kingland (1751 HK)18.75%GransingOutside CCASS
Grater Bay Ara (1189 HK)18.71%SatinuGet Nice
Luk Fook Holdings Intl (590 HK) 18.77%HSBCOutside CCASS
Loco Hong Kong Holdings (8162 HK) 13.19%EFGEasy One
WuXi AppTec Co. Ltd. (2359 HK) 11.70%JPMOutside CCASS
Citic Dameng Holdings (1091 HK) 34.39%CLSAOutside CCASS
Century Sunshine Group Holdings (509 HK) 22.76%UBSPrime
Vpower Group Intl (1608 HK) 11.70%ElstoneOutside CCASS
Source: HKEx

The following large movement(s) concern recently listed companies, and therefore are (likely) lock-up related.

Name

% chg

Into

Out of

Contel (1912 HK)15.63%HSBCOutside CCASS
Jiumaojiu (9922 HK) 57.82%CMBOutside CCASS
Source: HKEx
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