Education sector buzzing that PSG’s Curro negotiating to buy rival Advtech

By Chris Spillane

(Bloomberg) — Curro Holdings Ltd., an operator of private schools in South Africa, is in talks to buy smaller rival Advtech Ltd. to take advantage of demand for paid-for education in the nation, according to two people familiar with the matter. Advtech shares closed at the highest since at least 1997.

Curro School NelspruitDiscussions are at an early stage and one hurdle could be Advtech management’s reluctance to sell the company, said the people, asking not to be identified because the deliberations are private. Advtech shares closed 1.5 percent higher at 11.85 rand at the close of trading in Johannesburg, valuing the company at 5.4 billion rand ($439 million). Curro stock fell 0.8 percent to 33.30 rand.

Curro Chief Executive Officer Chris Der Merwe said he couldn’t comment beyond a June 12 statement that the company had entered negotiations, which didn’t provide further detail. Advtech interim CEO Frank Thompson declined to comment further than a June 25 statement that it had received an “unsolicited proposal.”

South Africa’s education system was ranked the fifth-worst among 144 countries in a survey by the World Economic Forum last year, increasing the attraction of private schooling for those who can afford it. The school pass rate for final-year students fell for the first time in five years in 2014 after changes to the curriculum system.

Advtech founder Brian Buckham, who retired from the board in 2010 after 23 years as a director, owns 5.2 percent of the company, while Thompson and chief operating officer Derek Honey hold a combined 4.1 percent. They aren’t seeking a sale, one of the people familiar with the matter said, and may be able to influence other investors if they decide not to recommend the offer.

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