This article was recently published on Calvin Yeo's blog, www.investinpassiveincome.com, and is reproduced with permission.
 AFTER THE Felda IPO,  another mega IPO to come from Malaysia is the IHH Healthcare  Bhd IPO. 
One of the reasons it is particularly interesting is that it  will have a dual listing in Singapore and Malaysia, while the primary  markets include Singapore, Malaysia and Turkey.
There seems to be a lot of chatter about the many cornerstone  investors lined up, including but not limited to EPF, PNB, Blackrock,  Singapore GIC etc. So this must be a good deal right? Well, not really. The reason so many huge funds are involved is because of the deal size.  
The market capitalization of IHH will be approximately RM 23 billion  based on RM 2.85 per share. 
One of the reasons why these funds like to  go for large deals is their huge fund size and the ability  for just one deal to take up a large proportion of their funds as  opposed to investing 10 to 30 different companies to make up the same  quantum. 
Being a Khazanah investment, we will definitely see support  from other government institutions such as EPF, PNB, Tabung Haji etc.
Another important aspect is that these funds do not need income from  their investments, they are mainly targeting capital growth.
 So for  individual investors, this may not be that great an investment as they  do not have a fixed dividend policy and has not given any hint about  what kind of payouts they may adopt. With no dividend yield to work on, I  wouldn’t bother investing.
Also looking at use of the proceeds, approximately 90% of the  proceeds will be used for repayment of borrowings rather than business  expansion. 
That’s not a very convincing IPO story. When you look at the  pre IPO balance sheet, you will notice that their leverage is rather  high at about 47% (Total Liability/Total Assets).
There also seems to be some confusion among various reports on IHH metrics. Looking at the 900-page prospectus, it is easy to see where people got confused. There are 3 groups of financial statements in there -
1. Financials of IHH
2. Financials of Acibadem
3. Pro Forma Financials of IHH + Acibadem

The correct one to focus on should be 3. Pro Forma Financials as you are  actually buying the combined entity. 
Unfortunately, rather than making  it easy to read, the prospectus is often confusing and difficult to  digest. 
That’s probably why research analysts get paid top dollars!
Hope the table on the left makes more sense. As we can see, trailing P/E is 93x  which is very high, compared to Raffles Medical which is only trading at  approximately 23x.
 Even if we look at forward P/E, it is very high at  35x, compared to Raffles Medical which is only about 21x. 
While there is  more growth potential for IHH, with projected 3,300 new beds over the  next 5 years, there are execution risks.
With such rich valuations, no clear dividend policy and sub optimal use of IPO proceeds, I doubt I will be investing in IHH now. 
In fact, healthcare stocks for some reason do not have attractive dividend yields, which explains why none of them are on my portfolio with the exception of healthcare REITs.
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