Updated to include a response by Hili Ventures
Hili Ventures was rebuffed by shareholders in its voluntary offer to acquire control of public shares.
In a company announcement, Hili Ventures said it had managed to take over slightly more than half of the listed public shares (51%) in Hili Properties, missing its target to reach an overall control of 90% of the company’s shares and delisting it from the stock exchange.
Hili Ventures Ltd is the majority shareholder in Hili Properties plc.
While announcing that it had reversed its position to delisting, Hili Ventures said it would continue to pursue its objective of delisting Hili Properties once it succeeds in buying more shares from the public.
By acquiring 51% of the public’s shares, the company reached an overall 87.7% shareholding, just short of the 90% target needed to squeeze out the remaining shareholders, remove its shares from the Malta Stock Exchange, and become private.
According to regulatory rules, once Hili Ventures reaches 90%, it can force the remaining shareholders to sell their shares.
Despite the setback, the company said it was satisfied with the outcome of this voluntary takeover bid.
“We will now continue working on consolidating our ownership through the available channels to continue to optimise our asset management and investment strategy,” the company said.
Through a voluntary offer issued last March, Hili Ventures offered shareholders the option to sell their 100,000,000 shares to the company.
Yet many considered the price offered to be too low, at just €0.24c per share, when they had bought the same shares at €0.27c per share just three years earlier.
The company insisted that it was offering a good deal, saying the price offered was higher than the market price.
According to the latest published financial statements, the company has grown significantly during the past three years. The Net Asset Value (NAV) of the shares reached €0.324c per share by June 2024.
Hili Ventures is now trying to obtain a development permit for a project on the island of Comino. The Planning Authority has already indicated its consent to the project despite receiving a record number of objections.
Following the article’s publication, Hili Ventures sent a right of reply stating, “This was not a share buy-back. The transaction in question was a voluntary public offer made by Hili Ventures Ltd.”
Editor’s note: In our initial story, we erroneously referred to the offer as made by Hili Properties, not its majority shareholder, Hili Ventures.
Tags
#Hili Properties plc
#Hili Ventures
#Malta Stock Exchange
#Melo Hili
#shareholders
#shares
So they want to buy the shares back at a very low price?
The shareholders who refused the offer should continue to hold until the NAV is offered. These people are so GREEDY. Hope they never get the permits for Comino.
Disgusting
Minority shareholders should only sell at ?0.324 50% premium = ?0.49!!! … being a lucrative business.
They should not get the permit to ruin Comino!! We’ve had enough of this nonsense and whoever approves such atrocities should be held personally liable!
The least Hili Ventures should do to be ethically correct is first consider paying a good dividend for profit made in 2024 and then offer each remaining shareholder a share price that is no less than the price each shareholder paid to purchase each share.
I wonder how the price dropped?
They should demand at least 10 times that amount. Why should the vile ex-minister Dr Austin Gatt be allowed to enrich himself at hard-working Maltese citizens expense YET AGAIN.
Make that AT LEAST 5 euros per share.
Insiha! Austin Gatt antics and ethics don’t go together. Never did and never will.
They probably WILL get the permit. The likes of the vile Austin Gatt, his cuz Tancred Tabone, Ninu Zammit and their very good friends Laurence and son CON-RAT Mizzi, Michelle and Joseph Muscat have ALWAYS acquired ALL they ever wanted. THAT is one of the main reasons why the Maltese Archipelago has ended up in such a horrific mess.
Usual tricks. Remember how the price of Maltacom shares was artificially pushed up to Lm 3.90, and ordinary shareholders were told by financial “advisors” to hold on to them or buy more? When all the ruthless A$$#oles had dumped their shares onto uninformed shareholders, PN-MLP-mafiosi coalition did away with the original Memorandum and Articles of Association (which specified that Maltacom was to enjoy an exclusive telecommunications monopoly over the Maltese Islands for at least ten years). Maltacom shareprice dropped to around Lm 0.56…. and the vultures moved in.