Hong Kong-based PEF Affinity Equity to acquire control of Lotte Rental

Lotte Rental is Korea’s No. 1 car rental and leasing firm

Affinity Equity Partners, a Hong Kong-based investment firm, will acquire a controlling stake in South Korea’s No. 1 car rental and leasing company Lotte Rental Co.

According to industry sources on Friday, Lotte Group will hold a board meeting later in the day to name Affinity Equity the preferred bidder to buy 60.67% of Lotte Rental from two Lotte affiliates.

Currently, Lotte Hotel Co. and Busan Lotte Hotel own 37.8% and 22.83% of Lotte Rental, respectively.

Lotte Rental’s operations on Jeju Island

Lotte Group and Affinity Equity will sign a memorandum of understanding on the stake sale and purchase after the board meeting, sources said.

The two parties are said to be in the final price negotiations.

Industry officials said the 60.67% stake’s sale price is estimated at the mid-1 trillion won ($706 million) range, putting the company’s overall value at 2.5 trillion won – twice the firm’s current market capitalization of 1.2 trillion won.

INCREASED CLOUT IN KOREA’S CAR RENTAL MARKET

In 2014, Affinity Equity tried to take over Lotte Rental but lost out to retail juggernaut Lotte Group, which acquired then KT Rental for 1.2 trillion won the following year.

SK Rent-a-Car’s used car lease delivery center

If the latest deal to acquire Lotte Rental is completed, Affinity will control Korea’s two largest car rental firms.

In June, the Hong Kong private equity firm bought SK Rent-a-Car Co., Korea’s No. 2 car leasing firm, for 820 billion won from SK Networks Co.

Lotte controls 21% of the Korean car rental and leasing market, while SK has a 15% market share. The two firms are competing with car-sharing firms such as SoCar and GreenCar.

LOTTE FACES LIQUIDITY SQUEEZE

The sale of Lotte Rental comes as Lotte Group is struggling to secure liquidity by selling off non-core assets amid concerns about the group’s financial stability.

Last week, the retail-to-chemical conglomerate’s holding firm Lotte Corp. replaced 21 chief executives across its affiliates and slashed executive jobs by 22% in a sweeping leadership reshuffle amid rumors of a liquidity crisis.

The reshuffle came amid widespread rumors that Korea’s sixth-largest business group by assets is facing a liquidity crunch, driven by poor performance in its retail and chemical subsidiaries, including Lotte Chemical Corp.

Lotte Hotel, Lotte Rental’s largest shareholder, plans to use the proceeds from the sale of the car leasing unit to improve its financial structure.

The sale is also expected to expedite Lotte Hotel’s planned initial public offering.

By Jun-Ho Cha

chacha@hankyung.com

In-Soo Nam edited this article.

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