Vocation Slims To Set Up Future

By Glenn Dyer | More Articles by Glenn Dyer

Vocation (VET), the struggling education services company, has sold its Endeavour College of Natural Health for up to $75 million to cut debt and try and survive.

Vocation will get $65 million cash (subject to working capital changes) and up to $10 million in “contingent deferred consideration.

The buyer is the UK-based global company, Study Group which was one of the underbidders to Vocation when it bought Endeavour last year.

The news saw a small rise in the Vocation share price yesterday to 8.4 cents. It was $3.40 in September of last year.

That indicates a certain scepticism about Vocation’s future viability.

Vocation is still working on a strategic review of its business and the looking at options for its capital structure to create a slimmed-down organisation.

Vocation will pay down almost all of its bank debt through the Endeavour sale, reducing debt from around $85 million to around $10 million.

Vocation’s three remaining largest businesses, Real Institute, AVANA and Customer Service Institute of Australia, will form the core of the slimmed-down company.

Vocation chairman Doug Halley says Vocation will announce its capital and corporate structure in the coming weeks along with a revision of profit forecasts to reflect the smaller version of Vocation after these asset sales.

On Tuesday, Vocation sold the Perth-based Australian School of Management and the Australian College of Applied Education for a combined $15 million, above the $4 million it paid for the two businesses last year.

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About Glenn Dyer

Glenn Dyer has been a finance journalist and TV producer for more than 40 years. He has worked at Maxwell Newton Publications, Queensland Newspapers, AAP, The Australian Financial Review, The Nine Network and Crikey.

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