Japan Post and Financial Units Soar in Trading Debut
04 Novembro 2015 - 12:00AM
Dow Jones News
TOKYO—Shares in state-owned Japan Post Holdings Co. and its
financial units rose more than 15% above their initial public
offering price in their trading debut Wednesday, an initial success
for the government's largest asset sale in nearly three
decades.
Shares of Japan Post Holdings traded at ¥ 1,642 ($13.55) on the
Tokyo Stock Exchange, 17% above the premarket IPO price of ¥ 1,400.
Japan Post Bank traded at ¥ 1,683, 16% above the IPO price of ¥
1,450. Japan Post Insurance shares traded at ¥ 2,994, 36% above the
IPO price of ¥ 2,200.
The three listings together are set to fetch about ¥ 1.4
trillion ($12 billion), making it the world's biggest initial
public offering since Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.'s $25 billion deal
in 2014, according to Dealogic. This is also Japan's third largest
IPO after the privatization of then-state-owned Nippon Telegraph
& Telephone Corp. in 1987 and telecommunication provider NTT
DoCoMo Inc.'s ¥ 2.1 trillion listing in 1998.
The strong stock-market reception for Japan Post's debut was
underpinned by interest from retail investors who liked the
relatively high dividend yield of the shares and were familiar with
the Japan Post name. Last month, the offerings were priced at the
top of their proposed range.
The news also bodes well for Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who is
counting on a successful listing to persuade Japanese investors to
rotate more of their bank savings into stocks. Mr. Abe hopes that
will give the struggling Japanese economy a boost.
The broader Nikkei Stock Average also rose 1.7% on Wednesday to
top the 19,000 mark after briefly falling below 17,000 in late
September on concerns about China's economy.
In Wednesday's IPO, the government is selling 11% of the shares
of Japan Post Holdings to the public and the holding company in
turn is selling 11% of the shares of its banking and insurance
units. All of the money raised will be used to help finance
recovery efforts after the 2011 earthquake and tsunami.
"Shares of Japan Post will likely see gradual growth just like
the Japanese economy in the future," said Mitsushige Akino, chief
fund manager at Ichiyoshi Investment Management.
Japan Post is expected to be the government's last major
privatization. The government has privatized several former
state-owned monopolies in recent decades, including a railway, a
telephone company and a cigarette maker.
The government allocated 80% of the shares to domestic investors
and the remaining 20% to overseas institutional investors. For the
deals, 11 brokerages worked as underwriters, including Nomura
Securities Co., Goldman Sachs Group Inc., and Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan
Stanley.
The offerings in Japan Post and its two financial units were
oversubscribed and lotteries were held to allocate shares among the
investors. It was reminiscent of the NTT offering in the middle of
Japan's economic bubble of the 1980s, when shares rocketed in the
initial months after trading. However, NTT's share price later
plunged and the broader stock bubble burst, disillusioning a
generation of Japanese individual investors.
Write to Atsuko Fukase at atsuko.fukase@wsj.com
Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
November 03, 2015 20:45 ET (01:45 GMT)
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