Apax has past form with online classifieds businesses in the UK, North America, Europe and China. Grant Samuel, in its report, notes that the buy-out firm "will no doubt be seeking to transfer some of this digital investment experience through to Trade Me".
The notice to shareholders of the April 3 meeting notes the Singaporean wealth fund will own about 20 per cent of Trade Me's holding company, and that other separate minority investors may end up owning up to 5 per cent.
The exact percentages haven't been settled, but Apax will definitely hold a majority stake.
The takeover is via a scheme implementation agreement, which has a lower bar to get shareholders over the line. The deal requires 75 per cent support and at least half the company's votes cast, as opposed to the 90 per cent threshold of acceptances of an offer needed in a formal takeover to trigger compulsory mop-up provisions.
The deal got Overseas Investment Office approval earlier this week.
If shareholders reject the offer, Grant Samuel anticipates Trade Me will continue on as a listed company and pursue existing strategies. That includes building new income streams from new business models that complement its existing services.
"It is also evaluating partnering with specialist providers and taking a percentage of revenues generated from a sale facilitated by Trade Me," the report said. "Such services could include the expansion of its logistics offering and the promotion of consumer finance and insurance products offered by its customers."
Grant Samuel also notes that Trade Me is investing in developing a data platform, saying the online auction site is only making limited use of the "vast array" of data it collects.
The report also said Trade Me has identified potential growth through full or partial takeover targets in adjacent sectors. The company was touted as a potential bidder for the Stuff news organisation, which Sydney-based Nine Entertainment Co is seeking to exit since its merger with Fairfax Media Group last year.