
Inflexion makes 3.7x in National Accident Helpline IPO
Inflexion Private Equity has generated a 3.7x return on its listing of National Accident Helpline (NAHL), which achieved a market cap of £82.5m.
NAHL has been listed on the AIM segment of the London Stock Exchange, with shares priced at 200 pence each. Inflexion has retained a 15% stake in the company, worth £12.4m based on the float price.
Espirito Santo Investment Bank acted as broker for the placement. The IPO sees the placing of 17.5 million ordinary shares, generating gross proceeds of £32.7m for Inflexion.
Previous investment
Inflexion acquired NAHL in October 2009 from previous backers LDC with money drawn from its 2006 fund. The deal was supported with debt from Clydesdale and Yorkshire Bank. Under Inflexion's stewardship, the company created its "Underdog" marketing campaign, which drove a 50% increase in enquiry levels in 2013. Company earnings have grown by around 30% with Inflexion's support.
Company
Established in 1993 and based in Kettering, NAHL is a referral source for personal injury claims. The company generated revenues of £39.7m in 2013 with operating profit of £9.8m.
People
Simon Turner is managing partner of Inflexion. Russell Atkinson is CEO of NAHL.
Advisers
Company – Pinsent Masons (Legal); KPMG (Financial due diligence).
Latest News
Stonehage Fleming raises USD 130m for largest fund to date, eyes 2024 programme
Multi-family office has seen strong appetite, with investor base growing since 2016 to more than 90 family offices, Meiping Yap told Unquote
Permira to take Ergomed private for GBP 703m
Sponsor deploys Permira VIII to ride new wave of take-privates; Blackstone commits GBP 200m in financing for UK-based CRO
Partners Group to release IMs for Civica sale in mid-September
Sponsor acquired the public software group in July 2017 via the same-year vintage Partners Group Global Value 2017
Change of mind: Sponsors take to de-listing their own assets
EQT and Cinven seen as bellweather for funds to reassess options for listed assets trading underwater