France's Accor in A$1.18b Mantra bid as Australia tourist boom stokes hotel demand

Accor, already the biggest hotelier in Australia, offered A$3.96 a share, or a 23 per cent premium to Mantra's closing price on Friday. PHOTO: REUTERS

SYDNEY (REUTERS, AFP) - France's Accor has bid A$1.18 billion (S$1.25 billion) for Mantra Group - a deal that would combine the two biggest hotel owners in Australia and seek to capitalise on surging tourism in the country.

Accor, already the biggest hotelier in Australia, offered A$3.96 a share, or a 23 per cent premium to Mantra's closing price on Friday. The total offer is worth A$4.02 per share if a six-cent final dividend paid in 2017 is included, Mantra said in a statement.

"They haven't lowballed it, that's for sure," said Anthony Porto, portfolio manager at Martin Currie Australia, which owns a stake in Mantra.

Together, Accor and Mantra would own over 300 hotels and about 50,000 rooms. That would give them roughly 11 per cent of Australia's hotel market, according to IBISWorld statistics.

Mantra operates a variety of properties, from resorts to serviced apartments under three brands - Peppers, Mantra and BreakFree - and has more than 5,500 staff. AccorHotels includes the Sofitel, Pullman, Novotel, Mercure and Ibis chains. It operates 4,200 hotels with 600,000 rooms worldwide.

A deal would be the second-largest in Australia's hotel sector, but the industry is quite fragmented and shares in Sydney-listed Mantra surged 17 per cent on Monday (Oct 9) as investors bet the deal would have a fair shot at gaining regulatory clearance.

Accor's bid comes as the country's hoteliers rush to build extra rooms to meet growing demand. The number of visitors to Australia surged 9 per cent in the past financial year to hit a record 7.9 million while spending by international visitors climbed to US$40.6 billion - also a record.

Visits from Chinese tourists - who tend to make longer trips and spend more - jumped 10 per cent and visitor numbers from Europe and the United States also rose.

Porto said there was potentially a lot of savings to be gained from the deal as the firms' back office and booking systems could be combined and Accor would benefit from having swallowed its biggest rival. But he also noted the industry faced tough competition from disruptive newcomers such as Airbnb.

Michael McCarthy, chief market strategist at CMC Markets, said any decision by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) on whether to sign off on the deal would depend on how it views the make-up of the sector.

"It's a difficult one to make a call on because the ACCC could take a narrow or broad definition to competition, for example, is Airbnb included in the competitive landscape?," he said.

The ACCC said it was aware of the offer but has yet to determine whether to scrutinise it.

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