Sydney, Feb 16, 2026, 17:32 AEDT — Trading shifted into after-hours.
- Qube finished the day up 3.3% at A$5.01, having hit A$5.05 earlier—yet the price stayed under the A$5.20 cash offer.
- The company has entered into a scheme implementation deed with a consortium led by Macquarie Asset Management.
- Upcoming triggers: investors are watching for the independent expert report, release of the scheme booklet, and Qube’s half-year numbers due Feb. 20.
Qube Holdings (QUB.AX) climbed 3.3% on Monday, closing at A$5.01 after the logistics firm announced it had secured a binding agreement to go private at A$5.20 per share. The stock touched an all-time high of A$5.05 during the day—still ending roughly 4% below the buyout price. Investing
The spread is drawing attention as traders weigh “deal risk”—basically, how likely delays or a failed vote become. For Qube, what’s coming up looks less freight-driven and more about navigating forms, facing regulators, and watching for any bump in offers.
Qube said it has struck a scheme implementation deed with a Macquarie Asset Management-led consortium, aiming for a full takeover of the company through a scheme of arrangement—subject to court sign-off and shareholder backing. Most investors are set to get A$5.20 per share in cash, minus any dividends declared ahead of completion. UniSuper, which holds 15.07%, plans to roll its stake into the consortium’s structure. Qube
Qube chairman John Bevan said the board was fully behind the scheme, pending no better offers and a green light from the independent expert. “The scheme consideration represents a significant premium,” he said in the announcement.
Paul Digney, managing director, called the offer a sign of “the value” generated by Qube’s growth strategy. He pitched the deal as a launchpad for the company to push ahead with expansion as a privately held business.
The company listed a slew of requirements still in play—approval from Australia’s Foreign Investment Review Board, the competition regulator, plus sign-offs in New Zealand and Papua New Guinea. Qube noted the deal isn’t contingent on financing, a detail that can be pivotal for investors if market sentiment sours.
Dividends add a layer of complexity for investors. Qube flagged the possibility of paying as much as 40 Australian cents per share in dividends, including a special payout, though any cash dividend will come off the A$5.20 headline offer. Franking credits, those tax advantages tied to Australian dividends, could be valued at up to 17 cents a share. Still, the company stopped short of guaranteeing either the amount or when those credits might be available, citing “no certainty” on size or timing.
Ani Satchcroft at Macquarie told Reuters the firm favors Qube’s broad exposure—from containers and vehicles, right through to resources and agriculture, both import and export. John Pearce, UniSuper’s chief investment officer, pointed to expectations for “more public-to-private transactions,” arguing that the shift enables longer-term moves without the constant pressure of the listed markets. Reuters
Qube tells shareholders it’s all about scale: the company runs a hefty portfolio of supply chain assets — ports, terminals, road and rail logistics, bulk operations — right in the thick of Australia’s trade networks. The scheme document singles out Qube’s interest in Patrick Container Terminals as a cornerstone of the group’s valuation.
The deal isn’t locked in yet. Regulatory sign-offs have a way of dragging out, and when markets shift, “material adverse change” clauses often come under the microscope. The dividend tweak is in play, too—a heftier payout can tip value away from the cash into franking credits, which don’t land equally for every shareholder.
In the days ahead, investors have their eyes on the scheme booklet’s release and the independent expert’s report, both critical for clarity on timing—though the company is still guiding toward a shareholder vote in June. On top of that, Qube will post half-year results this Friday, Feb. 20, offering a clearer snapshot of trading before the deal process picks up speed. Qube