Daily Dispatch

Lactalis bids for rest of Parmalat

- By AGNIESZKA FLAK

FRANCE’S Lactalis, the world’s largest dairy firm, said yesterday it was launching a buyout offer for shares in Italian group Parmalat it does not already own, with the aim to delist the company from the Milan stock exchange.

The announceme­nt comes as French media group Vivendi’s raid on Silvio Berlusconi’s broadcaste­r Mediaset has rekindled concerns about Italian companies falling into foreign hands.

Lactalis for years denied speculatio­n that it planned to delist Parmalat, which was relaunched in 2005 after going bankrupt following a financial scandal two years earlier, to have free rein in running the group.

In a statement yesterd Sofil – the investment vehicle of the Besnier family that owns Lactalis – said it would continue to support Parmalat’s growth, adding that this goal would be easier to reach with a smaller shareholde­r base.

Shares in Parmalat, based outside Parma and best known for its longlife milk, jumped more than 10% yesterday to touch their highest level in more than nine years.

By 11am GMT, they hovered around a notch above Lactalis’s bid price of per share.

“Some investors may be thinking of keeping the shares to trigger an upwards revision but 2c [above bid price] is nothing,” a Milan-based trader said.

In the statement, Sofil said the buyout offer targeted 12.26% of Parmalat. The price represents a premium of 8.5% on Parmalat shares’ closing level of December 23.

Lactalis took control of Parmalat, Italy’s biggest listed food company, in 2011 in a deal that triggered fears in Rome over foreign takeovers. However, an Italian counter-bid for the food giant failed to emerge.

Criticism mounted after a big chunk of Parmalat’s cash pile was used in 2012 to buy Lactalis’s sister unit LAG, a US cheese manufactur­er, leading to an investigat­ion into the deal.

The civil part of the case was shelved by an appeals court in 2014, although a related criminal probe is still open.

Parmalat was founded in 1961 but collapsed at the end of 2003 with a billion (R204-billion) hole in its accounts, following a scandal that forced management to seek bankruptcy protection and triggered a criminal fraud probe.

A streamline­d version of the dairy group relisted in 2005. — Reuters

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