Toronto Star

HUNGRY TO GROW

Aurora is making a formal offer for CanniMed despite facing silence from company’s board,

- ARMINA LIGAYA

Aurora Cannabis Inc. is pushing ahead with plans for an all-stock takeover offer for CanniMed Therapeuti­cs Inc. after failing to reach an agreement with the company’s board.

The company proposed the deal last week and gave the CanniMed board until Friday to respond. However, Aurora said Monday morning the board has not replied and it would go ahead with its bid, which it valued at $24 per CanniMed share.

“While we have attempted to engage and have a constructi­ve dialogue with CanniMed’s board and management about the strong merits of our offer, their refusal to enter into such a discussion, along with the powerful strategic rationale for the combinatio­n, leaves us no re- course at this point but to launch a formal offer for the company,” Aurora CEO Terry Booth said in a statement.

Aurora said it has agreements with shareholde­rs representi­ng 38 per cent of CanniMed’s outstandin­g shares to support its bid.

The offer follows an announceme­nt by CanniMed on Friday that it struck an all-stock deal to acquire marijuana company Newstrike Resources Ltd.

Under the Newstrike deal, shareholde­rs of the company will receive 0.033 CanniMed shares for each Newstrike share held. The companies valued the offer at 50.5 cents per share, based on CanniMed’s share price on Nov. 14 before it disclosed it was in talks to acquire Newstrike, which is backed by the Tragically Hip. CanniMed shareholde­rs would own approximat­ely 65 per cent of the combined company, while Newstrike shareholde­rs would hold the remaining 35 per cent.

Aurora called CanniMed’s acquisi- tion announceme­nt “extremely troubling” in light of its offer presented to CanniMed’s board on Nov. 13.

“At no point did CanniMed try to engage or otherwise entertain discussion­s with Aurora regarding the significan­t offer that had been pre- sented to their board for CanniMed shareholde­rs prior to entering into the Newstrike Resources agreement,” the company said.

The Newstrike offer “should be considered oppressive to CanniMed shareholde­rs,” it added.

The transactio­n is subject to approval from shareholde­rs of both companies during special meetings.

CanniMed president and chief executive Brent Zettl said Monday that Newstrike is “our optimal partner” as it looks to participat­e in the recreation­al marijuana market, with the July 2018 deadline set by the federal government for its legalizati­on rapidly approachin­g.

Zettl, who would not speak about Aurora during its conference call to discuss the Newstrike transactio­n, said this was CanniMed’s “initial step” to broaden beyond medicinal cannabis.

“We are bringing on board an iconic, recognized brand associated with the Tragically Hip that will have a definite place in the recreation­al market,” he said.

 ?? J.P. MOCZULSKI/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? CanniMed CEO Brian Zettl, left, said Newstrike is “our optimal partner” as CanniMed looks to participat­e in the recreation­al marijuana market.
J.P. MOCZULSKI/THE CANADIAN PRESS CanniMed CEO Brian Zettl, left, said Newstrike is “our optimal partner” as CanniMed looks to participat­e in the recreation­al marijuana market.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada