British supermarket group Morrisons on Thursday, August 19, agreed a takeover offer worth £7.0 billion (SU$9.54 billion) from US private equity group Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, reported Reuters.
Morrisons stated CD&R’s offer is worth 285 pence a share, trumping a 272 pence a share offer, worth £6.7 billion, from the consortium led by Softbank-owned Fortress.
CD&R’s offer, which Morrisons’ board intends to recommend unanimously, gives the supermarket chain an enterprise value of £9.7 billion once its debt is taken into account.
The battle for Britain’s fourth-largest grocer after Tesco, Sainsbury’s, and Asda, is the most high-profile looming takeover amid a raft of bids and counter bids, reflecting private equity’s appetite for UK.
CD&R’s agreed bid represents a 60% premium to Morrisons’ share price before takeover interest emerged in mid-June.
Morrisons’ shares closed on Thursday at 279.2 pence, indicating investors expected a higher offer.
CD&R, which has former Tesco boss Terry Leahy as a senior adviser, had a £5.52 billion proposal rejected by Morrisons on June 17.
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