National Post

LVMH, Tiffany agree on lower price in US$16 billion takeover agreement

‘Odd’ move to end legal dispute

- GREG ROUMELIOTI­S AND SARAH WHITE

NEW YORK/ PARIS • U. S. jeweller Tiffany & Co. has agreed with LVMH to slightly lower the price of its acquisitio­n by the French luxury goods group, in a move set to end a legal dispute between the two, sources familiar with the matter said on Wednesday.

The sources told Reuters the two sides had agreed to lower the price of the US$16 billion takeover to US$ 131.5 per share from US$ 135 per share, and that an announceme­nt that the deal is therefore back on track could come on Thursday.

Representa­tives for LVMH and Tiffany declined to comment.

The new terms would mean a discount of US$ 425 million for LVMH, led by billionair­e businessma­n Bernard Arnault, or less than 3 per cent of the initial deal price.

One of the sources said the new deal was likely to close in January, assuming it gains approval from Tiffany shareholde­rs. Another source said that under the new agreement there would be no restrictio­ns on Tiffany’s ability to pay dividends until the deal closes.

The initial deal ran into trouble last month when the French group said it could no longer complete the transactio­n by a Nov. 24 deadline.

It cited a French political interventi­on asking it to delay completing the acquisitio­n until Jan. 6 due to a threat of new U. S. tariffs on French products, and also what it described as the jeweller’s “dismal” performanc­e during the coronaviru­s crisis.

The two companies have been facing off in a Delaware court, with Tiffany seeking to force LVMH to honour the original deal. The case is scheduled to be heard in early January.

One of the sources told Reuters Tiffany had recently approached LVMH with a more conciliato­ry tone.

This source also said that the worsening pandemic in Europe and the United States also played a role in bringing the two sides back to the negotiatin­g table as business risks increase, and that discussion­s over Tiffany’s management under LVMH had been left for a later date.

Some analysts said they were baffled by the fact that LVMH appeared to have gone to great lengths to achieve what seemed a small discount to the original deal, although one source said LVMH would save on potentiall­y costly legal fees by ending the dispute now.

“If confirmed, the magnitude of the price tweak would be odd. It is unclear to us why LVMH and its legal team would pursue the course of action they have done since early September to secure a minimal discount to the terms originally agreed,” said Flavio Cereda at brokerage Jefferies.

Cereda added however that the business rationale behind the deal remained solid and that Tiffany was “the perfect fit” for Louis Vuitton owner LVMH.

LVMH agreed to buy Tiffany last year in its biggest acquisitio­n yet, betting it could restore the U. S. jeweller’s lustre by investing in stores and new collection­s.

 ?? CYRIL MARCILHACY / BLOMBERG ?? U. S. jeweller Tiffany & Co. has agreed to lower the price
— just slightly — of its acquisitio­n of LVMH.
CYRIL MARCILHACY / BLOMBERG U. S. jeweller Tiffany & Co. has agreed to lower the price — just slightly — of its acquisitio­n of LVMH.

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