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Voya Asia Pacific High Dividend Equity Income Fund T.IAE


Primary Symbol: IAE

Voya Asia Pacific High Dividend Equity Income Fund (the Fund) is a diversified, closed-end management investment company. The Fund’s investment objective is total return through a combination of current income, capital gains and capital appreciation. The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objective by investing primarily in a portfolio of dividend yielding equity securities of Asia Pacific companies. The Fund will seek to achieve its investment objective by investing at least 80% of its managed assets in dividend producing equity securities of, or derivatives having economic characteristics similar to the equity securities of Asia Pacific Companies that are listed and traded principally on Asia Pacific exchanges. The Fund will invest in approximately 60-120 equity securities and will select securities through a bottom-up process that is based upon quantitative screening and fundamental analysis. Voya Investments, LLC is an investment adviser of the Fund.


NYSE:IAE - Post by User

Post by Kenshoon Apr 08, 2014 1:05pm
275 Views
Post# 22425501

More to the Point RE: Acquisitions

More to the Point RE: Acquisitions
Carlyle sees buyers market as oil majors sell $300 bln of assets
02 Apr 2014 09:46 ET

By Dmitry Zhdannikov and Silvia Antonioli

LAUSANNE, April 2 (Reuters) - Oil majors have put up for sale assets worth more than $300 billion and more could come as shareholders press for lower capital expenditure and higher dividends, according to a major private equity player investing in energy.

Marcel van Poecke, managing director at private equity giant Carlyle's fund International Energy Partners, which specialises on European downstream investments, told a conference he saw the biggest buyers' market of his career as oil majors continue splitting oil production from refining.

"I've been in this business for 25-30 years. I've never seen the market with so many good assets for sale," he told the FT Commodities Summit.

Earlier this year, Carlyle made a surprise foray into Europe's struggling refining sector by teaming up with Swiss trading house Vitol to co-own refining, storage and distribution assets in Switzerland and Germany.

Van Poecke said he saw other private equity firms repeating such deals around the world as more majors will follow in the footsteps of U.S. firms ConocoPhillips, Murphy Oil and Hess Corp, which have either spun off refining or are undergoing business restructuring.

"Investors say 'We don't need you to be an integrated company' ...They say: 'We can buy BP for upstream and Valero for downstream. And we will create our own oil company'," said Van Poecke.

Companies such as BP and Royal Dutch Shell have embarked on a capital diet after years of record spending on huge offshore or U.S. shale projects.

They are now promising to return more money to shareholders through dividends and share buy-backs.

BP is selling assets worth around $40 billion and Shell plans to sell some $15 billion worth of assets.

"It is the buyers' market," said Van Poecke. (Reporting by Dmitry Zhdannikov; editing by Jason Neely)

News © Reuters Limited
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