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Amcor to acquire rival Bemis for $5.25bn

Deal comes as industry reshapes

- TOM WESTBROOK HARRY BRUMPTON

SYDNEY: The world’s biggest listed packaging company, Amcor Ltd, on Monday swooped on US rival Bemis Company Inc in a $5.25 billion all-stock deal that comes as packaging firms are jostling to buy growth with acquisitio­ns.

The transactio­n gives Australia-listed Amcor some new products, particular­ly food-packing film for which Bemis is known, as well as deeper access to the Americas at a time when shifting customer preference­s are shaking up the industry.

Bemis shareholde­rs get a 25% premium on the company’s closing stock price last Thursday, before details of the deal were reported.

Amcor will now have a bigger foothold in the US, which will help it manage shifting industry needs for packaging that addresses changing consumer preference­s such as snacking and environmen­tal concerns.

Amcor chief executive Ron Delia said in an interview with Reuters on Monday that divestitur­es were unlikely to result from the merger.

“We’re very happy with our portfolio as it currently sits, and this Bemis transactio­n just bolters that portfolio,” he said. “It’s the perfect fit for our flexible packaging footprint.”

Delia said the two companies first began talks in January this year.

Under the deal, Amcor will issue 5.1 of its shares for each Bemis share, valuing the stock at $57.75 per share, and Bemis shareholde­rs will end up with 29% of the combined company, which will be listed in both Sydney and New York.

The price is 12% higher than Bemis’ share price on Friday after the deal became public.

“I think it is a reasonable ‘out’ for a company which has been struggling (Bemis). I think Amcor is getting great technical know-how,” said Mark Wilde, analyst at investment bank BMO Capital Markets.

Bemis’ CEO, William F. Austen, said shareholde­rs would realise “a significan­t premium ... as well as the opportunit­y to continue to participat­e in the upside potential” of a bigger company.

The acquisitio­n is the 12th-largest outbound M&A deal by an Australian listed company, according to Thomson Reuters data, and the largest acquisitio­n by the 158-year-old firm that began as a paper miller. It is also its 12th deal the last two years as it buys growth around the world.

Bemis, which was founded as a burlap sack maker, has been facing hard times as changing consumer demands have upended a sector with modest but dependable growth rates.

Just in the last few months, Londonbase­d packaging group DS Smith Plc offered €1.9 billion ($2.2 billion) to buy Spanish rival Europac Group, while Ireland’s Smurfit Kappa Group Plc agreed to buy Dutch paper and recycling firm Reparenco Holding BV.

“It’s going to be a big challenge. There’s so much competitio­n,” Chip Dillon, a packaging company analyst at Vertical Research Partners, said in an interview.

He suggested Amcor might start by shedding some of Bemis’ lower-margin manufactur­ing.

Amcor said it would maintain a “critical presence” in Wisconsin, where Bemis is headquarte­red.

The transactio­n is subject to approval by regulators and shareholde­rs of both firms and is expected to complete in the first quarter of 2019.

 ?? AFP ?? A sign of Australian packaging group Amcor Ltd is seen outside one of its packaging facilities in Melbourne.
AFP A sign of Australian packaging group Amcor Ltd is seen outside one of its packaging facilities in Melbourne.

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