The world's first Islamic heathcare property trust plans to inject nine more properties into the trust, raising its asset size to just over RM1 billion by year-end (2008) from RM651 million now (Aug 2008).
Of the nine properties, it will buy six hospital buildings and one nursing college from KPJ Healthcare Bhd for RM305.9 million. The remaining two properties it plans to buy are a hotel and office tower, Hotel Selesa and Metropolis Tower, which company officials said will be complementary to the healthcare tourism industry.
If regulators approve the deal, it will be the first time in the world that a hotel is included in an Islamic REIT. Under syariah guidelines, hotels cannot be included. The hotel is well-positioned to benefit from health tourism sector growth and its operations are in accordance with syariah principles. The REIT's syariah committee had approved the proposed purchase.
Some RM392.9 million will go towards the purchase of the nine new assets. This will be satisfied by RM249 million cash and the issuance of 151.4 million new REIT units at 95 sen each.
KPJ will use funds from the sale to Al-'Aqar to build and acquire more hospitals, as well as reduce borrowings. They have RM200 million to RM300 million available to build and acquire hospitals, and we can also raise more cash by reducing our stake in the REIT," Muhammad Ali told reporters at a briefing yesterday.
For now (Aug 2008), KPJ to maintain a stake of about 49 per cent in the REIT.
KPJ owns or manages 18 hospitals in Malaysia and six overseas. Hospitals overseas may later be injected to the REIT, but "not at this juncture". The seven buildings that KPJ is selling to the REIT are the Seremban Specialist Hospital, Taiping Medical Centre, Kota Kinabalu Specialist Hospital, Bukit Mertajam Specialist Hospital, KPJ Tawakal Specialist Hospital new building, KPJ Penang Specialist Hospital and PNC International College of Nursing and Health Science.
This will be the third injection of properties into the REIT and it is expected to be completed by year-end (2008).
The KPJ board also approved expansion plans for the Nilai college, where it recently bought a nine-hectare piece of land. For the first phase, KPJ will spend RM22 million to build facilities to accommodate up to 3,000 students from 1,200 currently.
FBM KLCI - ended at intraday low, in sync with regional downtrend
-
Stocks on Bursa Malaysia ended lower yesterday with the benchmark FBMKLCI
closed at its intraday low, driven by a last-minute sell-off in utility
stocks...
16 hours ago
No comments:
Post a Comment