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Resignations hit Keppel T& T ahead of Reit listing
SEVERAL senior resignations in recent weeks at Keppel Telecommunications and Transportation (Keppel T& T) and its data centre business could raise questions over its highly anticipated listing of the unit.
The Business Times understands that Keppel T& T' s chief executive officer, Pang Hee Hon, plans to step down from the post which he has held since January 2010. The decision takes place at a pivotal time when Keppel T& T is readying itself for a milestone transaction - to spin off its data centre business and list it as a real estate investment trust (Reit) on Singapore Exchange' s mainboard.
Mr Pang' s impending resignation follows on the heels of other departures at Keppel T& T' s data-centre business, more specifically at Securus Data Property Fund, which is at the heart of the assets to be injected into the to-be-listed Reit.
Just two weeks back, Bruno Lopez, the 49-year old who had managed the firm' s data centre business and led many acquisitions in Asia and Europe, bowed out as chief executive of Keppel Data Centre. Keppel T& T announced Mr Lopez' s resignation on April 17, which took effect on April 20, saying he was leaving " to pursue other career opportunities" .
Mr Lopez was also co-fund manager of Securus, the world' s first Syariah-compliant data centre fund and jointly managed by Keppel T& T' s wholly owned subsidiary and Singapore-based private equity firm, AEP Investment Management (AEPim).
BT understands that two other key executives at Securus have also thrown in the towel: co-fund manager Jonathan King, who is also AEPim' s principal and director, and Nicholas Toh, senior vice-president of investments.
When contacted, a Keppel T& T spokesman confirmed that Mr Pang " has expressed his desire to leave" the firm because of personal reasons.
" Keppel T& T is exploring its options, and will make an announcement at an appropriate time," said the spokesman, who confirmed that Mr King and Mr Toh have also tendered their resignations from Securus Fund.
The company is still exploring the plan to list a data centre Reit. " That plan has not changed and we will make an announcement in the event of any material development," the spokesman added.
The resignations could have something to do with disagreements over how to move forward with the IPO, including remuneration packages for executives, a source suggested. " Why would key people who have worked so hard to grow the data centre business, simply up and leave and give up the carrots now that the business is at the cusp of an IPO?"
When asked if the exodus could be due to some differences with Keppel T& T chairman Teo Soon Hoe over the impending IPO, the spokesman said: " We are not aware of any differences."
Securus Fund, deemed the prized asset in Keppel T& T' s stable of data centre assets, has closed two rounds of capital raising so far, drawing in investors from the Middle East and Asia, including Brunei' s Perbadanan Tabung Amanah Islam Brunei (TAIB) as cornerstone investor.
The departures have sparked concerns that the listing of its data centre operations, which has galvanised the stock since the January announcement, may be affected. Some had expected the listing to take place in the first half of this year.
" Spinning off the asset will unlock huge shareholder value, failing which Keppel T& T shareholders will be back to square one," said one analyst.
Shares of Keppel T& T, a subsidiary of Keppel Corp, which, in turn, is 20 per cent owned by Temasek Holdings, jumped on the listing news early this year to a six-year high of $1.87 on Jan 8. The shares closed at $1.785 yesterday.
The sizeable listing, which reportedly could raise some $500 million, is deemed a grand way to reward shareholders as the data centre business, a major sweet spot for the group, has notched up stellar growth.
Keppel T& T' s recently released first-quarter scorecard attests to that for the period ended March 2014, the data centre segment made some $6 million in net profit on the back of $14 million in revenue, churning out roughly a third of Keppel T& T' s top and bottom lines.
The business is expected to gain more traction with the growth in cloud computing, e-commerce and social media.
" The data centre business is very niche and specialised and it' s not easy to replace these talents quickly. No ship can run without the captain for too long," said an analyst.