Brisbane Markets short-changed in WA venture
Who's getting the rough end of the pineapple here? Questions are being asked about the logic of takeover target Brisbane Markets borrowing $25 million to take a 45 per cent stake in Perth Markets and then being content with having only one board seat out of 10.
Who's getting the rough end of the pineapple here? Questions are being asked about the logic of takeover target Brisbane Markets borrowing $25 million to take a 45 per cent stake in Perth Markets and then being content with having only one board seat out of 10.
Hedge fund VGI Partners has been stalking Morgans-advised Brisbane Markets, which handles 550,000 tonnes of produce each year through Queensland's largest distribution centre for fruit and vegetables, in a takeover battle full of bumps and bruises which shows no sign of ending amicably.
The chief executive of Brisbane Markets, Andrew Young, who picks up two separate salaries as both the boss of Brisbane Markets and one from Brismark - the industry body and largest shareholder in Brisbane Markets - is headed for the boardroom at Perth Markets. But the 45 per cent stake gives Brisbane Markets Markets 10 per cent of the board seats.
Borrowing to pay for almost half of the Perth Markets business but without getting any control over the asset may seem to some like a takeover strategy straight out of the M&A playbook. Sometimes getting bigger is the best form of defence. Whether it's the smartest move when it comes to return on investment for the shareholders in the unlisted public company is another question.