Business World

BASF in talks to buy Bayer’s vegetable seeds business

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FRANKFURT/LONDON — German chemicals maker BASF is in talks with drugmaker Bayer to buy its vegetable seeds business, which is valued at around €1.5 billion ($1.85 billion) including debt, two people familiar with the matter said.

BASF is exclusivel­y conducting due diligence on the business, the people said, after Bayer offered to sell it to help assuage regulators’ objections to its $ 63.5- billion purchase of Monsanto.

However, Bayer may still open its books to others at a later stage, one of the sources said.

“BASF has responded to the market test questionna­ire issued by the EU Commission on Bayer’s draft commitment­s,” a BASF spokeswoma­n said referring to a questionna­ire which invited stakeholde­rs to provide informatio­n on Bayer’s concession­s.

“We are now carefully evaluating any remedy assets from the Bayer/Monsanto transactio­n that show a strategic and economic fit for BASF,” she added. Bayer did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

Bayer’s vegetable seeds business, which operates under the brand Nunhems, has more than 1,200 seed varieties in 25 vegetable crops.

Bayer had offered to divest the business as a unit including its intellectu­al property rights, locations and production sites to a new entrant in a move that rules out bids from private equity firms, Reuters reported in February.

Bayer clinched a deal in October last year to sell its seed and herbicide businesses to BASF for €5.9 billion.

Reuters reported on Wednesday that Bayer was set to win conditiona­l European Union antitrust approval for the mammoth acquisitio­n. —

 ??  ?? A LOGO is seen on the facade of the BASF plant and former Ciba production site in Schweizerh­alle near Basel on July 7, 2009.
A LOGO is seen on the facade of the BASF plant and former Ciba production site in Schweizerh­alle near Basel on July 7, 2009.

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