Super Retail snaps up Rebel Sport

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Car products chain Super Retail Group has agreed to buy top sports retailer Rebel Group for $610 million from one of the country's largest buyout firms, capitalising on the weak retail environment to pick up a quality asset.

Rebel Group's owner Archer Capital had originally planned to float the Rebel Sports chain, which has 128 stores across Australia and a 24 per cent market share, but shelved the IPO last year as the retail market weakened.

There has only been one private-equity IPO in Australia in the past two years - Collins Foods - after the market soured following the poor performance of Myer Group.
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Myer, sold by TPG, has never traded above its IPO price of $4.10. It was trading at $2.25 this morning.

Buyout firms have been relying on trade sales and deals with other private equity firms to exit the backlog of investments they made during the boom years up to 2007.

"For Archer, it is a good opportunity for them to exit Rebel and for Super to pick up a really good chain and bolt it on, and it is accretive," said Peter Esho, analyst at City Index.

"Maybe it is a sign there is a bit more corporate confidence out there to do deals," Mr Esho said.

Super Retail owns the Ray's Outdoors camping stores and Supercheap Auto chains.

Attractive entry point

Consumers sharply slowed their spending late last year following a string of aggressive interest rate hikes, and sentiment remains soft on worries about the economic outlook.

"It is an attractive entry point with the retail cycle currently at a cyclical low," Super Retail said in a presentation.

The deal will boost Super Retail's revenues to about $1.6 billion, with Rebel sales contributing about $630 million.

Super Retail said the acquisition would boost earnings per share in the current fiscal year and was a strong strategic fit.

It plans to increase the number of Rebel stores from 128 to 185 over the medium term.

Super Retail, with a market capitalisation of $860 million, plans to part fund the deal through a 9-for-19 rights offering at $5.34 a share to raise $334 million.

That is an 18 per cent discount to the last traded price of $6.50.

Read more: http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au

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Super worries over Rebel


REBEL sport



Analyst have voiced concern about the obstacles in the way of Super Retail Group achieving its long-term growth targets for the newly acquired Rebel Sport.

Underlining the problems facing Super Retail, which also owns Ray's Outdoors, Boating Camping Fishing (BCF) and Supercheap Auto, revenue for Rebel fell from $630 million in 2009-10 to $603 million in 2010-11 while pre-tax earnings were flat at $77 million.

''In our view, the challenge for Rebel is to grow sales after a number of years of declining sales including slightly negative like-for-like sales,'' Goldman Sachs analyst George Batsakis said.
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Mr Batsakis added in a note to clients yesterday that like-for-like sales had also been slightly negative for the year to date, with Super Retail expecting to increase sales at the sporting goods group through reinvestment in the business.

Super Retail announced on Monday it had agreed to pay $610 million for Rebel Sport and stablemate retail chain Amart All Sports, scooping up the business from private equity owners Archer Capital after they failed to flip the business onto the market via a sharemarket float.

The purchase is a big bet for Super Retail, which has a market capitalisation of only $859 million, and comes as the retail sector faces the worst trading conditions in 30 years.

Shares in Super Retail, which closed on Friday at $6.50, remained in a trading halt yesterday. The company is completing a fully underwritten 9-for-19 renounceable entitlement offer for new shares priced at $5.34 to raise roughly $334 million for the deal. The balance of the acquisition will be funded by debt.

''We believe Rebel may encounter a number of obstacles to achieving long-term sales growth targets,'' Mr Batsakis said. The obstacles included the growth of online retailing, expansion of local specialist sports retailers and resistance by global athletic brands to reducing prices.

Samantha Carleton of Credit Suisse described the deal as a ''full price paid for Rebel Group''.

She said that the group's 11 per cent margin on earnings before interest and tax was unsustainable.

''The most feasible earnings scenario in our view is for relatively flat earnings growth over the next few years as Super Retail reinvests in retail margins to drive sales and single-digit earnings growth over the longer term,'' she said.

Read more: http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au

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Super Group on rise with rousing $610m deal for Rebel


REBEL



$5.34 to raise roughly $334 million for the deal. The balance of the purchase price, $296 million, will be funded via debt. Super Retail shares closed on Friday at $6.50.

Archer Capital paid $370 million for sporting goods retailers Rebel and Amart All Sports in 2007.

From its 128 stores, Rebel generated revenue of $603 million in 2010-11 to produce earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation of $77 million.
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Super Retail chief executive Peter Birtles aims to expand Rebel's national footprint to 185 stores over the medium term.

Despite the gloomy conditions for retailers, Super Retail has enjoyed a strong performance from its specialty stores, lifting profit by 46.1 per cent to $55.59 million in the latest full year, on sales that rose 16.4 per cent to $1.092 billion.

The acquisition is expected to generate mid-single-digit gains in earnings per share this financial year.

''Super Retail has proved to be able to both set up new business as well as integrate acquisitions,'' said Dean Fergie, institutional adviser at JM Financial Group. ''It looks OK on the face of it, but when you bite off such a big piece of the pie, as they have with this, the risk is you get indigestion. But these guys you would back among other mid-tier retailers.''

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Super Retail wants Rebel with a cause by Michael Evans

INSIDER

What do you get when you cross a car parts retailer-cum-camping and fishing store, facing all the uncertainties of shopfront retail, with a private equity firm keen to offload a sports retailer it can't flog to small investors

To start with, a sizeable deal in flaky markets.

But in this case, the resulting outfit resembles the emergence of a substantial outdoor retailing emporium under the helm of Peter Birtles at Super Retail.
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With all the fears around discretionary retail from a slowing economy and online challenges, there's several ways to look at Super Retail - owner of Supercheap Auto stores and BCF (Boating, Camping and Fishing) - buying sporting retailer Rebel for $610 million.

Is this a smart move spreading earnings diversity across the outdoors product range at a low point in the cycle? Or a grab for the next leg of growth amid fears of what lies ahead for brick-and-mortar retailers? And what about, as one analyst put it, the ''inevitable questions whether there has been under-investment in the operations under previous private equity ownership''?

From Birtles's perspective, the deal clearly suggests he doesn't think retail is going to hell in a handbasket, confidently tapping shareholders for $334 million in equity and throwing another $269 million in debt onto the balance sheet. He now emerges with a quarter of the retail sporting market.

That said, Rebel sales did fall from $630 million in 2009-10 (with one extra trading week) to $603 million in 2010-11. Savings of $10 million have been identified but nailing the detail of different store formats and product lines will be in the execution.

As for the vendor, Archer Capital, its dreams of an $800 million float disappeared last year. It forked out $350 million to acquire Rebel in 2007, wrapping it into its other sporting enterprises to reap synergies.

The exit price will perhaps be disappointing given its hopes last year, but compared with some of the private equity dogs from the 2006-07 buyout vintage, Archer has done very nicely.

SILVER LINING

So far the talk about Qantas grounding aircraft due to continuing industrial disputes has been to the cost of the airline. But don't ignore the other side of the equation.

Figures have been bandied about of a $12 million revenue impact of grounding five aircraft for a month, while the overall cost of the dispute has been put as high as $20 million.

But do you remember what your economics teacher told you happens when you cut supply? Something about an impact on the pricing side - the same number of bums scrambling for fewer seats.

Analysts aren't keen to say it, but acknowledge that Qantas taking planes out of service will ''support'' and ''put a floor'' under ticket pricing. Not to mention the cost of running the planes.

While the airline is quick to sheet the blame for the groundings to unions, it's also worth pointing out that analysts have been noting a weakening of aircraft traffic.

The Macquarie Equities analyst Russell Shaw, for one, has noted that ''weaker than expected'' recent traffic and business confidence indicators are ''suggesting a slowdown in premium traffic is likely''.

SUNLAND SWAP

Gold Coast property developer Sunland is increasing its share buyback and quitting the Dubai market to focus on local developments.

The group confirmed yesterday that due to the near completion of its Palazzo Versace Dubai and D1 Residential Tower, it would swap the ownership with the joint partner, Emirates Investment Holdings, for a 100 per cent stake in the Palazzo Versace Hotel Gold Coast.

The group has made no secret that times are tough in the United Arab Emirates, and not that easy on the Gold Coast. But it continues to buy land in Queensland.

There will be no cash consideration in the scheme, and Sunland will continue with the Nur, Waterfront 1 and Waterfront 2 projects. Instead, the group will channel funds towards increasing its share buyback scheme to just over a third of issued capital.

The second largest holder after the Abdein family - Orbis with 21 per cent - is a supporter of the developer.

The managing director of Orbis Investment Management Australia, Simon Marais, said he saw the buyback as ''incredibly positive'', adding that Sunland's directors got it ''more right than wrong, whereas a lot of the real estate investment trusts are the opposite''.

Asked whether it could mean privatisation, Marais added, ''Well, they are buying good shares''.

PROXY SEASON

With the annual meeting season approaching, the US proxy advice firm Institutional Shareholder Services has announced that Daniel Smith, an American native, will head its local operations, which it will shift from Melbourne to Sydney next year.

Smith spent the 2008 AGM season working out of ISS's Melbourne office. He said he has since helped cover Australian companies from ISS's offices in the US.

ISS has been hit by a series of high-profile departures - Martin Lawrence and offsider Simon Connel left in July, and Dean Paatsch, who founded Proxy Australia and then sold it to ISS in 2005, quit last year. Paatsch is now helping one of ISS's former clients, the Australian Council of Super Investors, prepare for AGM season.

Most institutional shareholder work is centred on the AGM season, and it's fair to say ISS has not had ideal preparations. Smith, however, insisted it would have no trouble meeting deadlines. ''We have a number of analysts around the world who have Australian expertise, who have come down and chipped in during proxy season,'' he said.

''This year is just like any other year … we have sufficient strength to provide high quality research that is on time for our clients.''

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Super Retail to buy Rebel Sport for $610m


Super Retail Group has agreed to buy sports goods retailer Rebel Group for $610 million from private equity firm Archer Capital as the company seeks to expand in the leisure retail market.

Rebel is a market leader in the Australian sporting goods sector with 128 stores and about 24 per cent of market share, Super Retail said in a statement on Monday.

To fund the takeover, Super Retail will sell $334 million of new shares in a nine for 19 pro rata entitlement offer.
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The new shares will be sold at $5.34 each, an 18 per cent discount to Super Retail's last trading price of $6.50.

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