Andrea Perez-Sobers
Senior Reporter
andrea.perez-sobers@guardian.co.tt
The first initial public offering (IPO) in five years, Eric Solis Marketing Ltd (Solis), is seeking to raise $11 million from the sale of 2,750,000 at $4 per share.
The opening date for the IPO is today and it closes on August 9. Solis, a company that leases and services printing equipment, expected to be listed on the SME (Small and Medium-sized Enterprises) market of the Trinidad and Tobago Stock Exchange.
The lead broker is NCB Merchant Bank T&T Limited and the co-brokers are Bourse Brokers, Caribbean Stockbrokers, First Citizens Brokerage and Advisory Services, JMMB Securities TT, NCB Merchant Bank Trinidad and Tobago Limited, Republic Wealth Management, Sheppard Stockbrokers Limited, West Indies Stockbrokers.
The Solis prospectus, which was available on the company's website yesterday, indicates that of the 2,750,000 shares being offered:
* Individual investors are expected to receive a maximum of 1,125,000 million shares, equal to 40.9 per cent of the IPO;
* NCB Merchant Bank, which is underwriting the IPO, has been allocated a maximum shares 825,000, which equates to 30 per cent;
* Institutional investors are expected to receive up to 550,000 shares, 20 per cent of the IPO; and
* Directors and senior officers' maximum shares are expected to receive up to 250,000 or 9.1 per cent of the offer.
In an interview with Guardian Media yesterday, Angella Persad executive chairman said the Solis parent company, Office Authority, which is owned by several private shareholders, acquired Solis 17 years ago.
“We feel for the company to survive for another 50 years, it must take on a profile of independence. We have full confidence in the leadership team and we feel with a different profile and scrutiny we can step back and see the business run professionally. The Office Authority will still be 67 per cent shareholder of the business after the IPO, because what we are listing is 33 per cent,” Persad explained.
She said there are several ways that the $11 million the IPO is expected to yield can be used such as if Solis wanted to do a project and it needed to pledge publicly listed shares as collateral.
“It is now an independent source of collateral and independent security, as it has a public listing, it has a value, you know what the value is. It could be traded as there is a market for it, so it becomes an independent instrument that Office Authority now owns,” the executive chair added.
In the Solis prospectus, the company's audited revenue for the financial year 2023, stood at $28,123,040, in 2022 $20,463,922, and in 2021, $26,356,165.
While the comprehensive income for the financial year 2023 was recorded at $1,830,763, in 2022, $193,568, and in 2021 $340,664.
The prospectus states that in 2023, Solis's revenue and profit after tax grew over 2022, which reflected the trailing impact of the recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic, as many businesses fully reopened and most companies discontinued work-from-home programmes.
As a result of staff returning to the office, regular usage of multifunction printing and copying devices returned to pre-pandemic levels. Moreover, companies re-engaged in their regular cycle of upgrading their business equipment, incurring capital expenditure to do so, or entering into new rental agreements.
The company ended 2023 in a strong financial position, with $14.4 million in equity on its balance sheet, 15 per cent up from $12.6 million in the prior year.
SOLIS offers a comprehensive suite of printers, photocopiers, interactive displays, software consumables, and services that enable its customers to run their businesses.