logo
#

Latest news with #HealthCoInvestment

DCC to hand investors £800m from sale of healthcare arm
DCC to hand investors £800m from sale of healthcare arm

Daily Mail​

time13-05-2025

  • Business
  • Daily Mail​

DCC to hand investors £800m from sale of healthcare arm

DCC plans to return £800million to shareholders following the disposal of its healthcare division. The support services business last month agreed to offload its healthcare arm for £1.1billion to HealthCo Investment, a subsidiary of European private equity group Investindustrial Advisors. Although DCC expects to complete the deal in the third quarter of 2025, it intends to soon start a £100million share buyback scheme as part of the divestment process. Another £600million will be handed out once the disposal is finalised, while another £100million will be delivered after DCC receives a deferred payment of £130million within two years. DCC made the announcement alongside results showing its pre-tax profits slumped by 17.9 per cent to £294.9million in the year ending March. Adjusted operating profits in its technology segment plummeted by 15.7 per cent to £82million due to weak demand for consumer tech products across the UK and Europe in its information tech operations. However, they rose by 6.5 per cent to £535.5million in the group's energy business despite lower average commodity prices dragging DCC's overall turnover down by 4.5 per cent to £18billion. DCC Energy benefited from strong organic growth and takeovers, including Irish vehicle telematics provider Cubo and solar energy companies Wirsol and Acteam ENR. Donal Murphy, chief executive of DCC, said: 'We are pleased to report that we delivered another year of good growth, while making strategic progress to simplify the group to focus on our opportunity in energy. 'Our sale of DCC Healthcare enables a material return of capital to shareholders. We will focus our efforts on energy, our largest and highest-returning business.' Founded as Development Capital Corporation in 1976, DCC announced plans last November to break up the business to focus on the energy sector. Among the services provided by the company's energy division are liquid gas and fuel distribution, solar panel installation, and retail forecourts. Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell, said: 'DCC's future is in the energy sector, and it's fortunate that part of its business was the strongest. 'In a way, it justifies the decision to slim down. 'The problem child was the technology division, which is a concern given that DCC is on a mission to improve performance before selling the business. It needs to work fast to whip the tech arm into shape.' DCC shares were 4.5 per cent down at £48.44 on late Tuesday morning, making them the FTSE 100's biggest faller.

DCC to sell healthcare unit for €1.22bn
DCC to sell healthcare unit for €1.22bn

Irish Times

time22-04-2025

  • Business
  • Irish Times

DCC to sell healthcare unit for €1.22bn

DCC, the Dublin-based energy to technology distribution and services group, has agreed to sell its healthcare unit for £1.05 billion (€1.22 billion) as it focuses on simplifying its business around energy. The buyer is HealthCo Investment, which is owned by funds run or advised by London-based private equity firm Investindustrial Advisors, DCC said in a statement on Tuesday. The planned deal is on a cash-free, debt-free basis and is subject to various regulatory approvals. It is expected to complete in the third quarter of this calendar year, it said. Some £130 million of the consideration is deferred and will be received within two years. DCC, founded in 1976 by businessman Jim Flavin as a provider of venture capital for start-ups before floating almost two decades later, revealed in November it was abandoning its conglomerate roots with a plan to sell its healthcare division and review 'strategic options' for its technology business. READ MORE Chief executive Donal Murphy said at the time the group believes that its energy business – now by far its largest division – and related opportunity in energy transition presents the largest growth opportunity available to the group. 'The disposal of DCC Healthcare is a material step in simplifying DCC's operations and focusing on our high growth, high return, energy business. Our strategy will continue to build DCC as a market-leading multi-energy business,' said Mr Murphy on Tuesday. 'The profitable sale creates immediate value for our shareholders, and we are confident that Investindustrial will take DCC Healthcare forward in the best long‐term interests of its employees, customers and suppliers.' The distribution and services conglomerate, which sells everything from catheters to hospitals to audiovisual equipment to events companies, hired JP Morgan at the time to preparation the healthcare division for sale. DCC reiterated that it expects to return surplus cash generated from the healthcare business sale to shareholders, while maintaining a strong, investment-grade balance sheet. In the year ended 31 March 2024, DCC Healthcare recorded revenue of £859.4 million and adjusted operating profit of £88.1 million. The unit represented approximately 13 per cent of group operating profit. 2024.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store