Integrated Healthcare Holdings Sdn Bhd (IHH), whose shareholders include Khazanah Nasional Bhd and Mitsui & Co of Japan, has entered into a non-binding term sheet with Turkey's Acibadem Saglik Yatirimlari Holding AS, to explore establishing an international joint partnership.
If successful, the partnership between IHH and Acibadem will become an integrated group operating in the healthcare services sector within the geographical corridor from Asia-Pacific to the Middle East and Eastern Europe.
In a statement, the hospital operator said IHH and Acibadem will commence due diligence and exclusive negotiations for the execution of binding and definitive agreements in due course.
IHH wholly owns Parkway Pantai Ltd and IMU Health Sdn Bhd. IHH and Khazanah collectively own 11.5% of Bombay-listed Apollo Hospitals Enterprise Ltd in India.
Turkey is providing rich opportunities for merger specialists trawling for the next big deal, as the country’s booming economy and improving corporate governance partially insulate it from a slowing global M&A market.
If successful, the partnership between IHH and Acibadem will become an integrated group operating in the healthcare services sector within the geographical corridor from Asia-Pacific to the Middle East and Eastern Europe.
In a statement, the hospital operator said IHH and Acibadem will commence due diligence and exclusive negotiations for the execution of binding and definitive agreements in due course.
IHH wholly owns Parkway Pantai Ltd and IMU Health Sdn Bhd. IHH and Khazanah collectively own 11.5% of Bombay-listed Apollo Hospitals Enterprise Ltd in India.
Turkey is providing rich opportunities for merger specialists trawling for the next big deal, as the country’s booming economy and improving corporate governance partially insulate it from a slowing global M&A market.
Globally, mergers and acquisitions
activity has been suffering; the euro zone debt crisis is dampening activity in
countries to the west of Turkey, while political instability is complicating
decisions in much of the Middle East and North Africa.
A strong recovery from the global
financial crisis of 2008-2009 has persuaded many long-term investors to look at
Turkey. Its economy grew 10.2 percent in the first half of this year; it will
not escape the looming global slowdown, but the International Monetary Fund’s
forecast of 2.5 percent growth for Turkey in 2012 is still well above the 1.1
percent which it predicts for the euro zone.
Turkey’s location as a land bridge
between Europe and Asia is also attracting investors, even though its prospects
of joining the European Union have faded for the time being because of
disagreement over Turkey’s role in northern Cyprus and concern among some EU
states about the admission of a largely Muslim country.
Turkey's geographic proximity to Eastern
Europe, the Middle East and Asia positions Turkey as an ideal hub for the
corporate world as the China of Europe with half of the country younger than 29 years.
M&A deals with Turkish targets
shot up to 218 deals worth $24.9 billion last year from 167 deals worth just
$4.0 billion in 2009, when activity was hit by the last global economic slump,
Thomson Reuters data shows.
Last year’s dollar value was lower
than the record $30.6 billion hit in 2005, but the number of deals was much
higher; there were 102 deals in 2005. So far this year, the value of deals has
dropped back somewhat, to $8.4 billion, but the number has remained extremely
high at 151.
Global private equity houses, local independent PE shops as well as Family-owned PE funds are increasingly
active in Turkey.
The most popular M&A sectors
have been energy, power generation healthcare, retail and finance. But the biggest splash so far
this year was made by the world’s largest spirits company, Diageo, which agreed
in February to buy Turkish raki and vodka distiller Mey Icki for $2.1 billion.
For foreign investors, Turkey’s
corporate regulation has been a concern, but the planned introduction of the
Turkish Commercial Code in July next year is expected to improve disclosure of
companies’ financial performance, governance and ownership structures.
Turkey has adopted liberal economic policies under Prime Minister
Tayyip Erdogan’s AK Party government over the past decade, which has been a key source of stability and economic reforms.
1 comment:
Remarkable article!
which might be the next steps in such an impressive development strategy?
I could imagine this geographical-sectorial corridor expanded more. Towards west, perhaps. Why not!
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