"There is a natural alignment and synergy between Dorchester and Turners Auctions, which we talked about at the time of our investment in Turners," Dorchester chief executive Paul Byrnes said. "Seventy per cent of our finance lending is for motor vehicles and our insurance business has a focus on motor vehicle related insurance products."
Turners stock was put in a trading halt. Dorchester rose 4.6 per cent to 23 cents and is little changed this year.
Dorchester expects to raise between $25 million and $27.5 million by selling shares at 25 cents a piece to Turners stockholders including Bartel and via a placement, it said. It also expects to issue about $15 million of convertible notes to Bartel and other parties, it said. Final details would depend on what combination of cash and securities that Turners' shareholders accepted.
Dorchester plans to make a formal takeover offer in August, with resolutions relating to the proposal put to the company's annual meeting.
A successful takeover may lift Dorchester's 2016 pretax earnings to between $20 million to $25 million, from a forecast $10 million to $11 million forecast for the current year from existing businesses, it said.
Dorchester chairman Grant Baker said after the transaction, its balance sheet "will still remain relatively conservative," giving the company room to pursue further acquisitions.
See the Dorchester announcement here: