By Hanny Wan
March 29 (Bloomberg) -- Gome Electrical Appliances Holdings Ltd. agreed to pay HK$7 billion ($900 million) to its billionaire Chairman Huang Guangyu to take full ownership of China's biggest home-appliance retail chain.
The Hong Kong-listed company will buy the 35 percent of Gome Appliance Group that it doesn't already own, Gome Electrical said in a statement today. Gome Appliance operated 263 stores in 69 mainland cities at the end of 2005. Huang, one of mainland China's two richest people, controls both companies.
The acquisition will benefit Gome Electrical, said Mark Canizares, an analyst who follows Hong Kong equities at Manila- based CitisecOnline. The company wants to expand market share as it fends off competition from Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Best Buy Co. It plans to open as many as 150 outlets in China this year, betting rising incomes will spur demand for televisions, cameras and audio equipment in the world's fastest-growing major economy.
``Simplifying its corporate structure will work to Gome's advantage as it would be easier for investors who want to go into Gome,'' Canizares said.
Gome Electrical ``will benefit from the acquisition both financially and operationally,'' the company's statement said. There has been ``market expectation for the group to simplify its corporate structure'' since Huang announced plans to sell his remaining interest in January 2005, it said.
Shares
Shares of Gome were suspended today pending the announcement, and will resume trading tomorrow. The shares last traded at HK$8.05 and have surged 53 percent this year, compared with a 5.8 percent increase in the city's benchmark Hang Seng Index.
Gome Electrical aims to increase its market share to as much as 15 percent by 2008 from 6 percent last year, Curt Lam, head of corporate finance and development, said on a media conference call today. The company is looking in China for retailers with a network that can help boost its market position, and is also open to alliances and joint ventures, he said.
China's economy grew 9.9 percent in 2005, powered by record exports and investment in manufacturing. The government wants consumer spending to drive growth this year. Per capita disposable income of urban residents is expected to rise by 6 percent this year, Ma Kai, chairman of the National Development and Reform Commission, said on March 5.
Huang's Stake
Gome Electrical will pay HK$5.2 billion in stock, HK$990 million in cash and assume HK$761 million of debt. The additional shares will raise Huang's stake in Gome Electrical to 75.7 percent from 66 percent, according to the announcement.
The new shares will be issued at HK$8.05 each, representing a premium of 7.5 percent to the average closing price in the last 10 trading days, according to the announcement. The acquisition is subject to approval by independent shareholders.
The company will buy Grand Hope Investment Ltd., a British Virgin Islands-incorporated company that holds Huang's 35 percent interest in Gome Appliance Group. The acquisition price represents 25 times Grand Hope's 2005 profit, the statement said.
Huang, 36, is China's youngest self-made billionaire, having built a single store into the Gome Appliance Group.
Huang and Larry Yung, chairman of Hong Kong-listed Citic Pacific Ltd., are the wealthiest mainland Chinese on Forbes magazine's annual survey of the world's richest people, at No. 451 with fortunes each worth $1.7 billion. There are six other mainlanders on the list.
To contact the reporter for this story: Hanny Wan in Hong Kong at hwan3@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: March 29, 2006 09:44 EST
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