SINGAPORE (Nov 29): Thai Beverage is considering an initial public offering of its brewery business in what could be the biggest listing in Singapore in close to a decade, people with knowledge of the matter said. Shares of the company surged.
The acquisitive drinks maker controlled by Thailand’s richest man is speaking with potential advisers about the listing and may seek to value the unit at as much as US$10 billion ($13.7 billion), according to the people, who asked not to be identified because the information is private.
Shares rose as much as 5.2%, the most in over three months, amid heavy trading volume in Singapore on the news.
The IPO is likely to be the Singapore bourse’s biggest since the 2011 listing of Hutchison Port Holdings Trust, which raised US$5.5 billion. At a valuation of US$10 billion, the unit will also rank among the region’s biggest beer companies like China’s Tsingtao Brewery Co, although still far smaller than Budweiser Brewing Co, the Asian unit of beer giant Anheuser-Busch InBev SA. Budweiser Brewing raised US$5 billion in September in Hong Kong and was the world’s fourth-biggest IPO of this year.
A deal could include ThaiBev’s beer assets in Thailand and Vietnam, one of the people said.
ThaiBev is best known for producing Chang, a lager whose green bottles are adorned with an image of two elephants. It also brews Archa beer and the German-inspired Federbrau brand.
In 2017, ThaiBev’s Vietnamese affiliate agreed to buy a controlling stake in Sabeco, the country’s largest brewer, for about US$4.8 billion.
Although growth in beer consumption is flat or declining across mature markets like the US, Japan and China, Southeast Asia is one of the industry’s bright spots. An expanding middle class and youthful population drove a 300% surge in beer demand in Vietnam between 2002 and 2017, according to data from Euromonitor International.
Shares of ThaiBev have risen 43% in Singapore trading this year through Thursday, giving the company a market value of about US$16 billion. No final decisions have been made, and there’s no certainty the deliberations will lead to a transaction, the people said. Representatives for ThaiBev declined to comment.
Apart from the brewery business, ThaiBev runs distilleries that produce liquor including SongSam rum, Meridian brandy and Drummer whisky. It owns about 28.5% of Singapore’s Fraser & Neave, which sells 100Plus soft drinks and Magnolia dairy products, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
The group is controlled by Charoen Sirivadhanabhakdi, who is Thailand’s richest person with a net worth of about US$19.5 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.