250-year-old Yorkshire manufacturer acquired in MBO

HISTORIC Yorkshire manufacturer Spear & Jackson has been acquired as part of a major management buy-out (MBO).
The 250-year-old hand and garden tool manufacturer was bought together with Pantene Industrial, a contract manufacturing company with offices and production facilities in Hong Kong and China.
The MBO team, headed by Simon Hsu, acquired the businesses from their Hong Kong-listed parent, United Pacific Industries in a deal led by Yorkshire advisors.
HSBC’s Yorkshire Corporate Centre has provided a US$25m finance package to support the MBO via a global funding structure that includes the UK, France, Australia and Hong Kong. The deal was managed on behalf of the bank by senior corporate banking manager Neil Abbott and Ian Flaxman of HSBC Invoice Finance.
The Spear & Jackson Group employs 460 people globally and is based at Atlas Way in Sheffield. It manufactures and distributes hand and garden tools, metrology equipment, woodworking tools and magnetic equipment under several brand names, including Spear & Jackson, Bowers, Robert Sorby, Moore and Wright, Eclipse, WHS and Tyzack. With divisions across England, France, Australia, New Zealand and Canada, Spear & Jackson distributes products throughout the world.
Pantene Industrial has 950 employees, is located in Shenzhen, China, and provides Original Equipment Manufacturer and Electronic Manufacturing services to a range of international clients.
The deal was principally advised by the Yorkshire professional services community, with HSBC being advised by Robert Ross from PwC and Anna Robson from DLA Piper. The MBO team was advised by Ian Warman from KPMG in Leeds, Dean Gormley, head of the banking and finance team in the North at Irwin Mitchell, and Nigel Bolton, partner in the firm’s Leeds office.
Simon Hsu said: “The MBO is a hugely exciting opportunity to move Spear & Jackson and Pantene to the next level through both organic growth and acquisition. The deal was complex, being multi-currency and multi-jurisdiction and having the additional complication of the regulatory aspects of a UK-based defined benefit pension plan that had to be addressed in completing the transaction.”
Neil Abbott, HSBC senior corporate banking manager, said that as Spear & Jackson is a name synonymous with Sheffield, it was only fitting that the deal was principally advised by the South Yorkshire professional services community. “HSBC has delivered a complex funding structure that encompasses the company’s global presence to enable the management team to complete this acquisition,” he added.
Ian Warman, lead partner and pensions specialist at KPMG in Leeds, said: “The leadership team possess excellent insight and understanding into the factors that shape the markets in which they are operate. We are confident the business will continue to be a success under their direct ownership.”
Dean Gormley at Irwin Mitchell added that it was a “complex” global transaction, involving financing arrangements in Canada, France, Australia, New Zealand and Hong Kong and DLA Piper partner Anna Robson said DLA Piper is delighted to have advised HSBC in its support of a truly regional and international business on a transaction of this complexity with such international reach. “A deal of this magnitude with local and international connections strengthens the capabilities in the South Yorkshire region for banks and advisors alike to represent on a truly local and international basis,” she said.