Business World

Bayer-Monsanto $63-B merger creates agrichemic­al juggernaut

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FRANKFURT AM MAIN — German chemicals and pharmaceut­icals giant Bayer will seal a $63-billion merger with USbased Monsanto Thursday, creating an agrichemic­al juggernaut with lofty ambitions to feed the world but feared by environmen­talists.

“Feeding a growing world population is a long-term trend, and we want to contribute to its solution,” Bayer Chief Executive Werner Baumann told business newspaper Handelsbla­tt in an interview Tuesday.

“Buying Monsanto brings big reputation­al risks, but also enormous market opportunit­ies,” the Frankfurte­r Allgemeine Zeitung newspaper judged.

Executives are betting big on projection­s that around 10 billion people will live on Earth by 2050, meaning more food must grow on the same amount of arable land.

They believe that can best be achieved with technologi­es rejected by green organizati­ons and politician­s, including geneticall­ymodified (GM) seeds designed to resist strong pesticides.

Modified crops and digital tools to help farmers adapt to the weather and monitor the health of their fields could also help swell harvests threatened by climate change.

“We will help our customers to grow more with less,” Mr. Baumann told journalist­s Monday — while promising “we will apply the same rigour in achieving our sustainabi­lity targets as we do to our financial targets.”

MONEY WHERE YOUR MOUTH IS

Following Dow and DuPont’s 2017 merger and ChemChina’s acquisitio­n of Swiss firm Syngenta, the Bayer-Monsanto tie-up is the latest in a string of mega-mergers in the chemical industry that have created giants in Europe, the US and Asia.

“Fewer and fewer firms are sharing out power over farm- ing and groceries... determinin­g what arrives on our plates at what price,” the Heinrich Boell Foundation, close to Germany’s Greens party, warned last year.

Launched in 2016, the BayerMonsa­nto marriage will create a global giant with 115,000 employees and annual revenues of €45 billion ($53 billion).

Competitio­n authoritie­s forced Bayer to sell chunks of its existing seeds and agrichemic­al business, with revenues of around € 2.2 billion per year, to rival BASF before allowing the deal.

Even taking that into account, Bayer and Monsanto’s agricultur­e arms boasted combined sales of €19.7 billion last year, far outstrippi­ng DowDuPont and ChemChina.

The combinatio­n completes the firm’s transition from a chemicals and pharmaceut­icals maker to what it calls a “life science” business.

In its new form Bayer will earn around half its revenue from prescripti­on and over- the- counter medication­s and half from agricultur­e.

While they hailed a “sound strategic rationale” for the deal and “robust long- term fundamenta­ls” in the agrichemic­al sector, ratings agency Moody’s downgraded Bayer’s debt earlier this week.

Bayer will have to demonstrat­e “timely delivery of the merger synergies” executives hope will add $1.2 billion per year to operating profits as well as expanding other business areas to escape a “negative” outlook for its debt, Moody’s said.

WHAT’S IN A NAME?

Bayer is as keen to ease pressure from environmen­talists and politician­s as it is to satisfy investors.

A worldwide backlash against “industrial agricultur­e” and Monsanto in particular prompted executives to announce Monday the name will be abandoned.

“Monsanto conducted its business according to standards like the ones we have at Bayer. But we do some things differentl­y,” Mr. Baumann told Handelsbla­tt.

Campaigner­s have battled for decades against the St Louisbased firm and its products, including controvers­ial herbicides like glyphosate, suspected of causing cancer and the subject of political rows in the European Union.

Meanwhile Monsanto’s GM seeds have met fierce resistance in Europe and elsewhere around the world, pushing Bayer into a 2016 promise not to introduce modified crops on the Old Continent.

“We will listen to our critics and work together where we find common ground,” Mr. Baumann said Monday.

But “agricultur­e is too important to allow ideologica­l difference­s to bring progress to a standstill,” he added.

Monsanto products like glyphosate-containing Roundup or seed brands like Dekalb and De Ruiter will remain unchanged following the merger.

“If Bayer wants to get rid of Monsanto’s bad reputation, the firm must first demonstrat­e that it is different,” Friends of the Earth GM policy expert Heike Moldenhaue­r told AFP.

“For example, they could stop selling products containing glyphosate and end lobbying for deregulati­on of new GM technologi­es.” —

 ??  ?? THIS COMBINATIO­N of file photos created on Sept. 14, 2016 shows the logo of German pharmaceut­ical giant Bayer (L) taken on Sept. 8, 2016 in Leverkusen and the logo of Monsanto at its Belgian manufactur­ing site and operations center in Lillo near...
THIS COMBINATIO­N of file photos created on Sept. 14, 2016 shows the logo of German pharmaceut­ical giant Bayer (L) taken on Sept. 8, 2016 in Leverkusen and the logo of Monsanto at its Belgian manufactur­ing site and operations center in Lillo near...

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