The ASX is waking up to a rare kind of morning momentum: a clean, cash-on-the-table takeover that pins a major logistics name to a single number and dares the market to close the gap. Qube Holdings (ASX: QUB) is set to open higher after agreeing to a Macquarie Asset Management-led consortium deal that puts an implied enterprise value around A$11.7 billion and offers A$5.20 per share in cash (with a key dividend adjustment baked in). With Qube already printing fresh highs near A$5.05, traders are staring at a classic âbid gravityâ setup into the bell: will the stock snap tighter to the offer, or will deal-risk and timing keep a discount in place?
The deal in one line
Qube has signed a scheme implementation deed under which the consortium will acquire 100% of the company via a scheme of arrangement, offering A$5.20 cash per share (subject to a dividend âless cashâ mechanism), while cornerstone investor UniSuper (15.07%) will roll its stake into the consortium structure at equivalent value rather than taking cash.
Why the open could be volatile
Takeover trades often look simple on the surface: price moves toward the bid. But the ASX open can still be jumpy when the market is quickly repricing three things at once: the probability of completion, the time to cash, and the value of any conditions or deductions. In Qubeâs case, the headline number is clear, yet the fine print matters for where the stock stabilises after the first wave of orders.
The offer frames a meaningful premium. On Qubeâs last close before the earlier process announcement, the bid represented about a 27.8% uplift versus A$4.07. It also implied roughly a 24.0% premium to the volume-weighted average price over the period from late August 2025 to late November 2025 at A$4.19. And on a look-through basis that adjusts for Qubeâs 50% interest in Patrick Container Terminals, the premium was cited around 45.2% versus that same reference close.
The number traders will anchor to today
The clean âmagnetâ level is A$5.20, but the stock can trade below that when markets price in deal timing and risk. The discount is the marketâs way of saying: âcash later is worth less than cash today,â plus a small haircut for the chance something changes. Thatâs why a print around A$5.05 matters. It tells you the market is taking the proposal seriously, but itâs also leaving room for the calendar, approvals, and any dividend deductions.
Dividend twist: up to 40 cents can be paid, but it reduces the cash offer
One detail worth reading twice: under the deed, Qube is permitted to pay dividends up to a maximum of A$0.40 per share in total, including a potential special cash dividend and ordinary dividends for the half-year periods ending 31 December 2025 and 30 June 2026. Any cash amount of dividends paid after signing is deducted from the A$5.20 cash price.
In plain terms, a dividend doesnât create âextraâ value on top of the offer; it can bring cash forward for shareholders, but the takeover payment steps down by the same amount. For pre-market pricing, this mechanism can keep the stock from immediately printing right at A$5.20, because traders will model what they think Qube might distribute and when.
Whoâs buying and why it fits the moment
The buyer group is led by Macquarie Asset Management, with heavy-hitter support that includes UniSuperâs rollover and participation from Pontegadea, the investment vehicle associated with the Ortega family. That matters because infrastructure-style capital tends to favour assets that sit close to the real economy: ports, intermodal corridors, and âmust-runâ logistics networks that keep imports and exports moving.
Qubeâs footprint spans critical freight links where volume growth may not be linear month to month, but the long-term demand case is persistent. In takeover terms, itâs the sort of asset base that can look even more valuable off-market, where private owners can invest on longer time horizons without living quarter-to-quarter inside a public tape.
Valuation marker: the multiple that jumps out
The proposal points to an implied enterprise value to FY25 EBITDA multiple of about 14.5x. In a market where âquality infrastructureâ often carries a premium, that multiple signals the consortium is paying for durability and strategic positioning â not just near-term earnings.
What has to happen next
From here, the path is procedural but important. A scheme of arrangement typically requires court steps, shareholder approval thresholds, and regulatory clearances. The indicative timetable flags a first court hearing in April 2026, scheme meetings in June 2026, with an implementation window that points to July 2026. That time-to-completion is one reason you can still see a trading discount to the offer on day one.
The board has recommended the scheme unanimously, and the structure of UniSuperâs rollover reduces one obvious source of uncertainty: whether a large holder will vote against and force a renegotiation. Still, arbitrage traders will watch for updates on approvals and the scheme booklet, because those documents tend to clarify conditions, end dates, and the exact mechanics of the dividend cap.
How to read the price action at the bell
If Qube gaps higher and holds, itâs a sign the market is pricing a high probability of completion and a manageable timeline. If it spikes early and fades, that often means fast money is taking profit into the first liquidity burst, leaving longer-horizon holders to decide whether the residual discount compensates for the wait.
The simplest scoreboard into the open is the spread to the offer: the closer Qube trades to A$5.20 (net of any expected deductions), the more confident the market is that this becomes cash on schedule. For the broader ASX, a deal of this scale also tends to spill into âinfrastructure sympathyâ â where investors look for other asset-heavy names that might attract private capital next.
For readers tracking the original reporting, you can find the deal details in this Reuters coverage of the QubeâMacquarie agreement.















