SYDNEY, March 10 (Reuters) - Private equity giant TPG
The sale comes a year after TPG bought most of Ingham for A$880 million, according to local media. It also signals TPG's preference to exit assets without public listings despite improved market conditions.
"We've got all the largest pension funds and sovereign funds in the world expressing interest," said CBRE agribusiness director Danny Thomas, who is running the sale.
The deal would be structured as a 20-year leaseback of two portfolios of processing plants, feedmills, hatcheries and breeder farms.
TPG's purchase of Ingham Enterprises last March ended the Ingham family's control of the company that started as a farm in Sydney's outskirts in 1918.
Thomas said he met potential buyers in Europe, the Middle East and Asia and "significantly more than 10" funds were interested in the assets.
Australian food manufacturers have been highly sought after by private equity firms and other Asian buyers in the past two years due to resilient sales and solid cash flows.
($1 = 1.1016 Australian dollars)
(Reporting By Byron Kaye; Editing by Matt Driskill)
((byron.kaye@thomsonreuters.com)(+612 9373 1815))
Keywords: AUSTRALIA INGHAM/PROPERTY