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By Emma-Victoria Farr
FRANKFURT, March 4 (Reuters) - Perfume retailer Douglas
plans an initial public offering (IPO) on the Frankfurt Stock
Exchange aiming to raise 800 million euros ($868 million), it
said on Monday, in Germany's largest listing since Schott Pharma
1SXP.F last September.
The share sale is due to be completed in the first quarter
subject to capital market conditions. Germany's DAX stock index
hit a record high on Friday.
Douglas is targeting 800 million euros in proceeds, with an
additional equity injection of around 300 million euros from
existing shareholders including CVC Capital Partners, the
company said.
Proceeds will be used to reduce debt, while remaining loans
will be refinanced at better conditions, it said.
Based on enterprise value, Douglas is being valued between
5.5 to 6.5 billion euros including debt, with around 20% of
shares in free float, according to sources.
CVC and the Kreke family behind the business will not give
up shares in the IPO, with CVC remaining majority shareholder,
the intention to float document said.
Douglas was delisted from the stock exchange in 2013 after a
joint takeover by financial investor Advent and the Kreke
family. In 2015, the majority went to CVC for almost three
billion euros.
"The Douglas Group is ideally positioned to further
capitalise on the large and resilient European premium beauty
market," CEO Sander van der Laan said in a statement, calling an
IPO the "logical next step" in the company's growth strategy.
This would be the second listing in Germany this year
following tank part manufacturer Renk's IPO in February. Renk's
shares have risen from an issue price of 15 euros to 27 euros,
in a positive signal for equity markets.
There are at least four other major IPOs pencilled in for
the first half of the year in Europe, sources have told Reuters.
The prospective share sales come after a quiet two years for
IPOs, as soaring debt costs and geopolitical uncertainty
dampened sentiment towards new stock listings.
Douglas operates 1,850 perfume stores in 22 countries, but
now does almost a third of its business online.
In its first quarter of this financial year which included
Christmas, it posted a 13% rise in adjusted EBITDA to 348
million euros on sales up 8% to 1.56 billion euros.
By 2026, van der Laan wants to increase sales by an average
of 7% per year to more than five billion euros.
The IPO is being arranged by Citi, Goldman Sachs, Deutsche
Bank, Unicredit and UBS.
($1 = 0.9219 euros)
(Reporting by Emma-Victoria Farr, Alexander Huebner and Rachel
More; Editing by Mrigank Dhaniwala)
((emma-victoria.farr@thomsonreuters.com;))