Advertisement

Dividend bonanza as Li & Fung sells three businesses for US$1.1b

Remaining US$580m in proceeds will allow the firm ‘more financial flexibility’ as it continues to execute its key three-year goal of building an end-to-end digital supply chain, says CEO Spencer Fung

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
FILE PHOTO - The company logo of Li & Fung on a glass door at Li Fung Tower where the company is based in an industrial district in Hong Kong. Photo: Bobby Yip

Shareholders in the venerable Li & Fung Limited – the multi-faceted Hong Kong trading conglomerate started in 1906 – are set for bumper payouts after the firm announced it is selling its furniture, jumpers and beauty businesses to a consortium for US$1.1 billion, nearly half of which will be paid out as a special dividend to stockholders.

Advertisement

Li & Fung has been supplying high-volume, time-sensitive consumer goods for years from Hong Kong, acting as a global middleman for manufacturers, including global retail giant, Wal-Mart.

The buying consortium is 45 per cent owned by Hony Capital, a Chinese private equity firm controlled by Legend Holdings. Fung Holdings and Fung Investment, parts of the Fung Group, also own 45 per cent and 10 per cent in the consortium. Fung Group is the controlling shareholder of Li & Fung.

“It is a very strategic deal. The proceeds will allow the company to continue the simplification of its businesses and execute our three-year plan,” said Spencer Fung, Li & Fung’s CEO, Photo: Xiaomei Chen
“It is a very strategic deal. The proceeds will allow the company to continue the simplification of its businesses and execute our three-year plan,” said Spencer Fung, Li & Fung’s CEO, Photo: Xiaomei Chen

Agreement has been reached, it said, that Hony and its parent company Fung Group would purchase the units for US$1.1 billion, of which US$520 million will be paid as a special dividend, which translates into HK$0.476 per share – double its 2016 annual dividend of HK$0.23 per shares. Its shares closed at HK$4.08 on Thursday, up 3.29 per cent.

Advertisement

The remaining US$580 million in proceeds will allow the company “more financial flexibility” as it continues to execute its key three-year goal of building an end-to-end digital supply chain, said Spencer Fung, its CEO.

Advertisement