Tag Archives: DEAL1

China property sector default woes deepen amid Evergrande uncertainty

Police officers and security personnel walk outside the headquarters of China Evergrande Group in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, China, September 30, 2021. REUTERS/Aly Song

HONG KONG, Oct 5 (Reuters) – Worries about rising debt defaults by Chinese property developers sapped investor sentiment on Tuesday amid fresh credit rating downgrades and uncertainty about the fate of China Evergrande Group as it scrambles to raise cash by selling assets.

Evergrande (3333.HK) is facing one of the country’s largest-ever defaults as it wrestles with more than $300 billion of debt. The company last month missed making coupon payments on two dollar bond tranches.

The possible collapse of one of China’s biggest borrowers has triggered worries about contagion risks to the property sector in the world’s second-largest economy, as its debt-laden peers are hit with rating downgrades on looming defaults.

Evergrande on Monday requested a halt in the trading of its shares pending an announcement about a major deal. Evergrande Property Services Group (6666.HK) also requested a halt referring to “a possible general offer” for company shares.

China’s state-backed Global Times said Hopson Development (0754.HK) was the buyer of a 51% stake in the property business for more than HK$40 billion ($5.1 billion), citing unspecified other media reports.

Evergrande declined to comment ahead of an official announcement, as trading in the company’s shares remained suspended on Tuesday.

While investors awaited confirmation of the Evergrande stake divestment, Chinese developer Sinic Holdings (2103.HK) became the latest to be downgraded by Fitch Ratings on uncertainty over the repayment of its $246 million bonds maturing Oct 18.

Sinic’s long-term issuer default rating was cut to ‘C’ from ‘CCC’, and came after the company announced that certain subsidiaries have missed interest payments on onshore financing arrangements, Fitch said in its report on Tuesday.

S&P Global Ratings also lowered its rating on the company, saying it had run into “severe liquidity problem and its debt-servicing ability has almost been depleted”. It said the company was likely to default on its notes due on Oct. 18.

Sinic declined to comment on the ratings downgrades.

“Since the Evergrande crisis, investors have become more worried and focused about Chinese developer’s repayment ability,” Thomas Kwok, head of equity business at Hong Kong brokerage CHIEF Securities.

The liquidity issues have increased as many developers were not able to issue fresh debt to refinance, and as their ability to raise cash from selling properties dropped because of new regulations, he said.

“This will be a vicious cycle for the developers that are not strong enough, because there is not enough liquidity in the market for everyone.”

MARKET IMPACT

The $5 billion Evergrande is likely to get from the reported unit stake sale would theoretically cover its near-term offshore bond payments. It has $500 million in bond coupons due by year-end, followed by a $2-billion dollar bond maturity in March.

Analysts have said the potential Evergrande deal signals the company was still working to meet its obligations. But any fire-sale of its assets would further amplify concerns about the rest of China’s property sector and the broader economy.

Chinese homebuilder Fantasia Holdings’ (1777.HK) dollar-denominated bonds lost nearly half their market value in a massive Monday selloff, after it said it had failed to make a $206 million international market debt payment on time.

In a statement, the property developer said it will assess the potential impact of the non-payment on the group’s financial conditions.

An index of China high-yield debt (.MERACYC), which is dominated by developer issuers, hit its lowest since the pandemic drawdown in 2020, and has lost almost 20% since May – while comparable U.S. and European indexes have rallied.

Asian markets fell for a third straight session on Thursday as Evergrande’s troubles added to broader investor worries about rising inflation and slowing world growth, while in Hong Kong the company’s developer peers were under renewed pressure.

An index tracking Hong Kong-listed mainland property stocks (.HSMPI) fell 2.95% on Tuesday, compared to a 0.3% gain in the local benchmark (.HIS).

Shares in Guangzhou R&F Properties (2777.HK) and Sunac China Holdings (1918.HK) each fell 8% while the offshore yuan was also under pressure. Shares in Evergrande’s electric vehicle unit eased after jumping on Monday.

Evergrande’s dollar bonds have firmed marginally over recent days, but remain at distressed levels below 30 cents on the dollar.

Reporting by Clare Jim, Tom Westbrrok and Alun John; Writing by Sumeet Chatterjee; Editing by Shri Navaratnam

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CD&R wins $10 bln auction for UK supermarket Morrisons

A view of a Morrisons supermarket in Birtley, Britain, August 16 2021. REUTERS/Lee Smith/File Photo

  • CD&R wins auction with 287 pence per share bid
  • Fortress loses after offering 286 pence per share
  • Morrisons recommends shareholders accept CD&R’s offer
  • Shareholders to vote on deal on Oct. 19

LONDON, Oct 2 (Reuters) – Clayton, Dubilier & Rice (CD&R) has won the auction for Morrisons (MRW.L) with a 7 billion pound ($9.5 billion) bid, paving the way for the U.S. private equity firm to take control of Britain’s fourth-biggest supermarket group.

The board of Morrisons recommended CD&R’s 287 pence per share bid on Saturday, hours after its bid beat a consortium led by Softbank (9434.T) owned Fortress Investment Group, which had made an offer worth just a penny less per share at 286 pence.

CD&R’s victory marks a triumphant return to the UK grocery sector for Terry Leahy, the former chief executive of Britain’s biggest supermarket chain Tesco (TSCO.L), who is a senior adviser to CD&R.

The board recommended that shareholders vote in favour of the 287 pence per share offer at a meeting slated for Oct. 19, saying the private equity group had confirmed its previously stated intentions towards Morrisons remained unchanged.

“Today’s final offer from CD&R represents excellent value for shareholders while at the same time protecting the fundamental character of Morrisons for all stakeholders,” Morrisons Chairman Andrew Higginson said in a statement.

If shareholders approve the offer, CD&R could complete its takeover by the end of the month, making Morrisons the second UK supermarket chain in a year to be acquired by private equity after a buyout of no. 3 player Asda, completed in February.

EGGS AND BUTTER

CD&R has committed to retaining Morrisons’ headquarters in Bradford, northern England, and its existing management team, led by CEO David Potts.

It also says it will execute the supermarket chain’s existing strategy, not sell its freehold store estate and maintain staff pay rates.

These commitments are not legally binding, however.

Morrisons started out as an egg and butter merchant in 1899. It listed its shares in 1967 and is Britain’s fourth-largest grocer after Tesco, Sainsbury’s (SBRY.L) and Asda.

The takeover battle which has been running since May is the most high-profile of a raft of bids for British companies this year, reflecting private equity’s appetite for cash-generating UK assets.

CD&R’s winning bid was only marginally above its 285 pence a share offer which had already been recommended in August.

The final offer represents a 61% premium on Morrisons’ share price before takeover interest publicly emerged in mid-June. Some analysts have said the victor may have to sell off assets, such as factories, warehouses or stores, to make a decent return.

CD&R could combine its 918 Motor Fuel Group (MFG) fuel forecourts with the 339 owned by Morrisons, opening Morrisons convenience stores on the sites, but that could face scrutiny from the competition regulator.

Leahy was CEO of Tesco for 14 years to 2011 and will now be reunited with Morrisons’ Potts and Higginson, two of his closest lieutenants at Tesco.

Potts, who joined Tesco as a 16-year-old shelf-stacker, will make more than 10 million pounds from selling his Morrisons shares to CD&R. Chief operating officer Trevor Strain will pocket about 4 million pounds.

Fortress is left to lick its wounds and mull the cost of the saga. Documents published in July showed that Fortress expected to incur banking and advisory fees and expenses of 263.5 million pounds.

In a statement Fortress said: “The UK remains a very attractive investment environment from many perspectives, and we will continue to explore opportunities to help strong management teams grow their businesses and create long-term value.”

Sainsbury’s has in recent months been mooted as another possible target for private equity and investment companies.

($1 = 0.7383 pounds)

Reporting by Sarah Young and James Davey; Editing by Kate Holton, Christina Fincher and Catherine Evans

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China Evergrande to sell $1.5 bln stake in Shengjing Bank to state firm

Cranes stand at a construction site near the headquarters of China Evergrande Group in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, China September 26, 2021. REUTERS/Aly Song

  • Shengjing demands repayment of debts due to it
  • Evergrande says sale will help stabilise Shengjing
  • Evergrande faces bond payment deadline Wednesday

HONG KONG, Sept 29 (Reuters) – Cash-strapped China Evergrande (3333.HK) said on Wednesday it plans to sell a 9.99 billion yuan ($1.5 billion) stake it owns in Shengjing Bank Co Ltd (2066.HK) to a state-owned asset management company as it scrambles to raise funds.

Shengjing Bank had demanded that all net proceeds from the disposal be applied to settle the relevant financial liabilities of the group due to Shengjing Bank, Evergrande said.

That requirement suggests that Evergrande, which missed a bond interest payment last week, will be unable to use the funds for other purposes such as another interest payment to offshore bondholders of $47.5 million due on Wednesday.

The payment deadline is being closely watched by investors as the developer’s next big test in public markets. read more

Evergrande has rapidly become China’s biggest corporate headache as it teeters between a messy meltdown with far-reaching impacts, a managed collapse or the less likely prospect of a bailout by Beijing. read more

The 1.75 billion shares, representing 19.93% of the issued share capital of the bank, will be sold for 5.70 yuan apiece to Shenyang Shengjing Finance Investment Group Co Ltd, a state-owned enterprise involved in capital and asset management, China Evergrande said in a filing to the Hong Kong bourse.

Shenyang Shengjing’s stake in the bank will be increased to 20.79% after the deal to become the bank’s largest shareholder.

“The company’s liquidity issue has adversely affected Shengjing Bank in a material way,” Evergrande Chairman Hui Ka Yan said in the statement.

“The introduction of the purchaser, being a state-owned enterprise, will help stabilise the operations of Shengjing Bank and at the same time, help increase and maintain the value of the 14.75% interest in Shengjing Bank retained by the company.”

Beijing is prodding government-owned firms and state-backed property developers to purchase some of embattled China Evergrande Group’s assets, people with knowledge of the matter told Reuters this week. read more

Its stake in the bank would be reduced to 14.75% from 34.5%.

Reporting by Donny Kwok and Anne Marie Roantree; Editing by Stephen Coates

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Sydney Airport sale a step closer after improved $17.4 bln offer

People walk through the domestic terminal at Sydney Airport in Sydney, Australia, December 21, 2020. REUTERS/Loren Elliott/File Photo

  • Bidder is a consortium of infrastructure investors
  • Latest proposal is 3.6% higher than last one
  • Non-exclusive due diligence expected to take 4 weeks

SYDNEY, Sept 13 (Reuters) – A sale of Australia’s biggest airport moved closer on Monday as an infrastructure investor group won permission to conduct due diligence on Sydney Airport Holdings Pt Ltd (SYD.AX), after sweetening its takeover offer to A$23.6 billion ($17.4 billion).

The move sent the airport’s shares up 5%, with analysts saying a rival bid appeared unlikely given the scale of the funding needed and foreign ownership rules that mean the airport must remain 51% Australian owned.

“We assign a high probability of a deal succeeding given the board’s commitment to unanimously recommend the (consortium’s) offer if there is no alternative higher offer,” Credit Suisse analysts said in a note.

Sydney Airport is Australia’s only listed airport operator and a purchase would be a long-term bet on the travel sector which has been battered by the pandemic. The country plans to gradually open its borders once 80% of adults are fully vaccinated, a milestone expected by the end of the year.

A successful takeover would be among the largest buyouts ever of an Australian firm and underline a year of stellar deal activity, that has already seen a mega $29 billion buyout of Afterpay (APT.AX) by Square (SQ.N).

The improved offer of A$8.75 a share – an increase of 3.6% – follows prior proposals from the consortium pitched at A$8.45 and A$8.25, both of which were rejected by the airport operator’s board as inadequate. read more

Sydney Airport shares were trading at A$8.40 on Monday morning, below the offer price, due to the length of the time the transaction will take to complete as well as the limited prospects for a rival bid.

“An alternative bidder appears highly unlikely,” Jefferies analyst Anthony Moulder said in a note to clients.

The bidding consortium, Sydney Aviation Alliance (SAA), is comprised of Australian investors IFM Investors, QSuper and AustralianSuper and U.S.-based Global Infrastructure Partners.

Record-low interest rates have prompted pension funds and their investment managers to chase higher yields. Australia’s other major airports are unlisted and owned by pension funds and infrastructure investors.

SAA has been granted non-exclusive due diligence that is expected to take four weeks after signing a non-disclosure agreement, Sydney Airport said.

If SAA makes an acceptable binding proposal, the current intention is for the board to recommend it in the absence of a superior offer, the airport operator added.

UniSuper, Sydney Airport’s biggest shareholder with a 15.3% stake, said it was open to rolling that equity into an investment in the privatised company, as required as part of the bid conditions.

“The price represents a very full valuation for the airport, particularly given the uncertain medium-term outlook for international travel,” UniSuper Chief Investment Officer John Pearce said in a statement.

The deal will require an independent expert’s report, approval from 75% of shareholders and a green light from the competition regulator and the Foreign Investment Review Board, in a process that typically takes months to complete.

Jamie Hanna, deputy head of investments at VanEck, said he believed SAA would consider increasing its bid after examining the airport’s books given the improving travel outlook.

An SAA spokesperson said the consortium welcomed the announcement and looked forward to working with Sydney Airport’s board to finalise the transaction.

($1 = 1.3587 Australian dollars)

Reporting by Jamie Freed and Paulina Duran; editing by Diane Craft and Richard Pullin

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PayPal heats up buy now, pay later race with $2.7 bln Japan deal

Sept 7 (Reuters) – U.S. payments giant PayPal Holdings Inc (PYPL.O) said it would acquire Japanese buy now, pay later (BNPL) firm Paidy in a $2.7 billion largely cash deal, taking another step to claim the top spot in an industry experiencing a pandemic-led boom.

The deal tracks rival Square Inc’s (SQ.N) agreement last month to buy Australian BNPL success story Afterpay Ltd(APT.AX) for $29 billion, which experts said was likely the beginning of a consolidation in the sector. read more

“The acquisition will expand PayPal’s capabilities, distribution and relevance in the domestic payments market in Japan, the third largest ecommerce market in the world, complementing the company’s existing cross-border ecommerce business in the country,” PayPal said in a statement on Tuesday.

Fuelled by federal stimulus checks, the BNPL business model has been hugely successful during the pandemic and has upended consumer credit markets. These firms make money by charging merchants a fee to offer small point-of-sale loans which shoppers repay in interest-free instalments, bypassing credit checks.

Apple Inc (AAPL.O) and Goldman Sachs (GS.N) are the latest heavyweights that have been reported to be readying their own version of the service. read more

Paypal, already considered a leader in the BNPL market, also entered Australia last year, raising the stakes for smaller companies such as Sezzle Inc and Z1P.AX Co Ltd (Z1P.AX), stocks of which were down in midday trading on Wednesday.

The U.S. payments firm has been among the big winners of the COVID-19 pandemic as more people used its services to shop online and pay bills to avoid stepping out. Businesses, forced to move their stores online, also flocked to PayPal boosting its customer base of active accounts to more than 400 million worldwide.

Buying Paidy will help PayPal expand in Japan, where online shopping volume has more than tripled over the last 10 years to some $200 billion, but more than two-thirds of all purchases are still paid for in cash, PayPal said in an investor presentation.

Paidy, with more than 6 million registered users, offers payment services that allow Japanese shoppers to make purchases online, and then pay for them each month at a convenience store or via bank transfer.

The Financial Times had reported last month that Paidy was considering becoming a publicly listed company.

Paidy, whose backers include Soros Capital Management, Visa Inc (V.N) and Japanese trading house Itochu Corp (8001.T), will continue to operate its existing business and maintain its brand after the acquisition.

Founder and Chairman Russell Cummer and CEO Riku Sugie will continue to hold their roles in the company, PayPal said.

The transaction is expected to close in the fourth quarter of 2021, and will be minimally dilutive to PayPal’s adjusted earnings per share in 2022.

BofA was the sole financial adviser to PayPal on the deal, and White & Case was lead legal adviser. Goldman Sachs advised Paidy, and Cooley LLP and Mori Hamada & Matsumoto provided it legal counsel.

Reporting by Anirudh Saligrama in Bengaluru and Sayantani Ghosh in Singapore; Editing by Ramakrishnan M., Kim Coghill and Lincoln Feast.

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Tesla’s Musk signals concerns over Nvidia deal for UK chip maker -The Telegraph

SpaceX founder and Tesla CEO Elon Musk looks on as he visits the construction site of Tesla’s gigafactory in Gruenheide, near Berlin, Germany, May 17, 2021. REUTERS/Michele Tantussi/File Photo

Aug 28 (Reuters) – Tesla Inc (TSLA.O) Chief Executive Elon Musk has signaled competition concerns over Nvidia Corp’s (NVDA.O) planned purchase of British chip designer Arm, the Telegraph reported on Saturday, citing multiple sources.

E-commerce giant Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O) and smartphone maker Samsung Electronics Co Ltd (005930.KS) have also lodged opposition to the deal with U.S. authorities, the newspaper reported.

Earlier this year, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission opened an in-depth probe into the takeover. read more The probe findings are expected in the coming weeks, according to the newspaper.

Tesla, Amazon, Samsung and Nvidia did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Nvidia is likely to seek European Union antitrust approval for the $54 billion purchase of Arm early next month, with regulators expected to launch a full-scale investigation after a preliminary review, people familiar with the matter have said. read more

Reporting by Aishwarya Nair in Bengaluru

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Exclusive: Exxon launches U.S. shale gas sale to kick-start stalled divestitures

HOUSTON, Aug 10 (Reuters) – Exxon Mobil Corp (XOM.N) has begun marketing U.S. shale gas properties as it ramps up a long-stalled program that aims to raise billions of dollars to shed unwanted assets and reduce debt taken on last year.

Three years ago, the top U.S. oil producer set a goal of raising $15 billion from sales by December 2021. More recently, it promised to accelerate lagging sales to whittle a record $70 billion debt pile.

The company’s XTO Energy shale unit is seeking buyers for almost 5,000 natural gas wells in the Fayetteville Shale in Arkansas, spokeswoman Julie King confirmed.

The assets are among gas projects with declining production and market value Exxon is selling as it focus on newer ventures in Guyana, offshore Brazil and Texas’s Permian Basin.

Exxon is marketing the properties itself and aims to receive bids by Sept. 16 and close any sale by year-end.

“We are providing information to third parties that may have an interest in the assets,” King said. No buyers have been identified, she said, declining to confirm the due date for bids or the company’s anticipated value on the wells.

DECLINING PRODUCTION

The company has achieved about a third of its three-year, $15 billion sales target.This year, it has received sales proceeds of $557 million through June, and has deals pending valued at more than $2.15 billion. read more

Exxon acquired the Fayetteville assets in 2010 for $650 million during a shale boom that would change the U.S. energy landscape, leading to an oversupply of gas that pushed prices to record lows and last year. This led Exxon to reduce the value of its U.S. oil and gas holdings by $17.1 billion. read more

Output in the assets on offer fell by more than half since 2016 to about 160 million cubic feet per day last year, according to Exxon marketing materials seen by Reuters.

The Arkansas properties cover some 416,000 net acres (1,680 square kilometers) and are some of the North American natural gas resources cut last year from Exxon’s development plan. The sale includes 844 operated and 4,104 non-operated wells, King said.

Dallas-based Merit Energy is evaluating the properties, one person familiar with the matter said. Merit in 2018 purchased about 258,000 acres in the same area from BHP for $300 million.

Merit did not reply to requests for comment by phone, e-mail and LinkedIn. Exxon declined to comment on potential bidders.

WORLDWIDE DIVESTMENTS

Exxon, which suffered a historic $22.4 billion loss in 2020, is selling dozens of properties in Asia, Africa, the United States and Europe.

The company is prioritizing debt reduction and its shareholder dividend, officials said last month. After total debt last year doubled to almost $70 billion since 2018, Exxon paid off more than $7 billion this year, to reduce its burden to $60.6 billion.

This year, it has held talks with Britain’s Savannah Energy (SAVES.L) over properties in Chad and Cameroon and sold stakes in two deep water oilfields to Occidental Petroleum (OXY.N) and others. read more

Exxon is seeing new interest in its properties with this year’s rebound in oil and gas prices, said Exxon Senior Vice President Jack Williams on July 30.

“That whole divestment discussion that we’ve had in the past continues,” Williams said.

By Sabrina Valle in Houston, Liz Hampton in Denver and Shariq Khan in Bengaluru; editing by Gary McWilliams, Marguerita Choy and David Gregorio

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Airbus sees 1,000 German jobs at risk without parts unit spinoff – source

MUNICH, Aug 8 (Reuters) – Airbus (AIR.PA) has warned employees of hundreds of possible job losses at its small-parts manufacturing business in Germany if the unit is not hived off in line with a cost-cutting strategy set out in April, a source familiar with the plan told Reuters.

The group sees 1,000 of its 2,500 small-parts manufacturing jobs in Germany at risk if it continues to manufacture parts within the group rather than spinning off the activities, said the source who is familiar with plans presented to its works council and trade unions.

Under the shakeup set out four months ago, Airbus’s Premium Aerotec unit in Germany would be split off, with part combined with other Airbus manufacturing plants and the rest folded into a new business specialising in small mass-produced “detail” parts which could be spun off. read more

Premium Aerotec makes components for commercial and military aircraft, mainly in Augsburg and Varel near Bremen.

The unit has been lossmaking for years and Airbus argues that with a new owner it could also work for competitors or win customers from other industries, and thus better utilise its workforce.

The planemaker has previously said it calculates that Premium Aerotec is between 25% and 30% more expensive than other suppliers. Airbus declined to comment when asked about the numbers of jobs at risk under the restructuring.

Trade union IG Metall is opposed to the spinoff, fearing job cuts and less favourable working conditions after a break-up of the unit, at which fuselages of Airbus aircraft are also assembled.

The issue is taking on a political dimension. Finance Minister Olaf Scholz, the Social Democrats’ (SPD) chancellor candidate for September’s federal election, is planning a “solidarity visit” on Monday to Premium Aerotec in Varel.

Airbus has also promised to examine a future for parts production within the group.

“Our analysis, which we shared with employee representatives at the end of July, clearly showed that the internal route would be much more painful for employees to achieve competitive cost structures,” a spokesperson said.

Therefore, he said, the company wanted to find a better owner who could preserve more jobs. Switzerland’s Montana Aerospace (AERO.S) has already expressed interest.

“The window of opportunity to reposition is now, before production rates return to pre-crisis levels,” the Airbus spokesperson said.

(This story has been refiled to clarify in second paragraph the nature of the jobs)

Reporting by Alexander Huebner
Writing by Paul Carrel and David Holmes

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Reese Witherspoon’s media firm to be sold to Blackstone-backed company

Aug 2 (Reuters) – Academy award-winning actress Reese Witherspoon’s media company, Hello Sunshine, is selling itself to a newly formed media firm backed by Blackstone Group Inc (BX.N) for an undisclosed sum.

The sale will value the company at about $900 million, people familiar with the matter told Reuters.

Founded in 2016, Hello Sunshine is the women-led production house behind series like HBO’s “Big Little Lies,” “The Morning Show” on Apple TV+ (AAPL.O) and “Little Fires Everywhere.”

The deal comes as a video streaming war between Netflix Inc (NFLX.O), Walt Disney Co’s (DIS.N) Disney+ and AT&T Inc’s (T.N) HBO Max heats up, forcing the companies to spend billions of dollars on content.

“The rapidly growing demand for high-quality content is one of our firm’s highest-conviction investment themes,” Joe Baratta, the global head of private equity at Blackstone, said in a statement.

Reese Witherspoon arrives to the Oscars red carpet for the 93rd Academy Awards in Los Angeles, California, U.S., April 25, 2021. Chris Pizzello/Pool via REUTERS

Earlier this year, Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O) announced the purchase of MGM, the fabled U.S. movie studio home to the James Bond franchise.

Blackstone is executing the Hello Sunshine deal through its private equity arm, which had previously bought a majority stake in dating app Bumble Inc’s (BMBL.O) parent Magic Labs.

The new media company buying Witherspoon’s firm will be led by former Disney executives Kevin Mayer and Tom Staggs.

Its board will include Witherspoon and Hello Sunshine Chief Executive Sarah Harden, who will continue to oversee the day-to-day operations of the production house.

Witherspoon and Harden will also remain significant equity holders of Hello Sunshine.

Reporting by Niket Nishant and Sohini Podder in Bengaluru; Writing by Noor Zainab Hussain; Editing by Aditya Soni

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China’s Evergrande to sell stakes in HengTen internet unit for $418 mln

A logo of China Evergrande Group is displayed at a news conference on the property developer’s annual results in Hong Kong, China March 28, 2017. REUTERS/Bobby Yip/File Photo

HONG KONG, Aug 2 (Reuters) – China’s most indebted property developer Evergrande Group (3333.HK) has agreed to sell stakes in its internet unit HengTen Networks Group Ltd (0136.HK) worth a total of HK$3.25 billion ($418.2 million), an exchange filing showed on Sunday.

Shares of Evergrande declined more than 2% in early trading on Monday on continued worries over its financial health, while HengTen jumped more than 30%. Shares of HengTen resumed trading on Monday after a suspension on Thursday.

Worries over the developer’s debt and the potential for systemic financial risk have intensified after Evergrande said in June its project companies had not paid some commercial paper on time, but it said it was arranging payment.

Fitch downgraded its credit rating on Wednesday, signalling its concern of a potential default. read more

To ease the pressure, Evergrande will sell a 7% stake at HK$3.20 per share to a unit of Tencent Holdings Ltd. for HK$2.07 billion and a 4% stake to an unidentified buyer for HK$1.18 billion. The filing did not give a timing for the sale.

Before the transaction, Evergrande held a 37.55% stake in the company, while Tencent (0700.HK)held 16.9%. Evergrande’s stake will go down to 26.55% and Tencent’s holdings will increase to 23.9% after the sale, the filing showed.
Evergrande has agreed to provide a 5-year loan of HK$2.07 billion to HengTen to support its business development, the company added in the filing.

HengTen’s shares are expected to resume trading on Aug. 2 after being halted on July 29, the filing showed.

($1 = 7.7720 Hong Kong dollars)

($1 = 7.7721 Hong Kong dollars)

Reporting by Marius Zaharia; Additional reporting by Clare Jim; editing by Barbara Lewis and Sonali Paul

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