UPDATE 2-F&P Appliances gets China shareholder, shares leap
* China's Haier to buy 20 pct stake
* F&P Appliances posts big FY loss on writedowns; no div
* F&P to raise new equity, agrees finance
* Sees little sign of improvement in sales over next 12 mths
* Shares soar 58 percent (Adds company comment)
By Adrian Bathgate
WELLINGTON, May 27 (Reuters) - Chinese white goods maker Haier Group will buy 20 percent of New Zealand's debt-laden Fisher & Paykel Appliances Ltd (FPA.NZ) for $28.5 million, F&P said on Wednesday, sending F&P shares up more than 50 percent.
New Zealand's largest appliance manufacturer also reported a full-year loss and said it would raise up to NZ$201 million ($124.3 million) through a rights issue.
The deal with Haier (1169.HK) will open up the Chinese market to F&P Appliances and involves joint sales and marketing and manufacturing arrangements, CEO John Bongard said.
It is also a leap offshore for Haier, which has previously eyed deals with U.S. firms, including Maytag and General Electric's (GE.N) appliances unit.
"We think the arrangement with Haier offers a great opportunity for synergies and fully globalises the F&P brand," he told a media briefing.
F&P said the capital issues that had forced it to secure temporary funding and seen its share price plunge were now fixed, although its trading outlook was still tough.
Investors were relieved to see F&P secure a backer, and the associated capital package went a long way to securing the company's short-term future, said Ricky Ward, an analyst at Tyndall Investment Management.
"It's good they've got a cornerstone shareholder, and a reputable one at that, and that's why the share price has reacted in the manner it has," Ward said.
F&P Appliances shares jumped as much as 58 percent to NZ$1.00, around the level prior to the company's mid-February announcement that sales had fallen sharply and it needed to raise capital due to a blowout in short-term debt.
F&P Appliances posted a net loss of NZ$95.2 million in the year to end-March, compared with a year-earlier profit of NZ$54.2 million. It said it would not pay a dividend. Continued...

