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Euronext raises Oslo Bors bid to $786m

- A visitor enters the Euronext Paris stock exchange in La Defense business district of Paris on Jan 16, 2019. INTI LANDAURO TERJE SOLSVIK

PARIS/OSLO: Euronext NV raised its bid for Oslo Bors yesterday to around

6.79 billion Norwegian crowns ($786 million), upping the stakes in a battle with Nasdaq for the Norwegian stock exchange operator.

The bidding war for one of the last independen­t stock markets in northern Europe follows consolidat­ion which has been driven by the need to spend on technology and new entrants.

By raising its offer to 158 Norwegian crowns ($18.29) per Oslo Bors share, hours before its opening gambit of 145 crowns was due to expire, Euronext outbid Nasdaq Inc’s

152 crowns a share. Paris-based Euronext revealed its first offer in late December with the backing of slightly more than half of Oslo Bors shareholde­rs, but did not win over the exchange’s board, which then convinced Nasdaq to make a higher bid.

Although Euronext’s chief executive Stephane Boujnah said its bid offered “clear and superior benefits”, Oslo Bors counterpar­t Bente Landsnes told Reuters that she still backed Nasdaq’s offer, which also has the support from the largest shareholde­r, Norwegian bank DNB.

“We’ve conducted a thorough evaluation of who would be the best owner, and we stand by that assessment. We have not had any further contact with Euronext following our board’s endorsemen­t of Nasdaq’s bid,” Landsnes added.

Euronext’s Boujnah was in Oslo yesterday to drum up support for the deal, which already has the “irrevocabl­e” support of 50.5% of shareholde­rs in Oslo Bors, including a 5% stake owned by Euronext itself.

This means that for Nasdaq to win it either needs Norwegian regulators to back it over Euronext or for those who made commitment­s to Euronext’s bid to let these lapse, which would be in August for some and in December for 38%.

“We want to make Oslo Bors a leader in the Nordic region. We want to grow Oslo Bors,” Boujnah told reporters, addressing the concerns of some of the shareholde­rs opposing Euronext’s offer.

“We will maintain a very strong presence of Oslo Bors in the local (business) ecosystem, which is very important for them. And we can make Oslo Bors a leader in the Nordic region, which is also very important for them,” he told Reuters.

Euronext has had only one meeting with DNB, on Jan 17, and one meeting on Jan 10 with pension fund KLP, which holds 10% of Oslo Bors and is also backing Nasdaq, Boujnah said.

“Let’s quickly forget the past five weeks and let’s focus on how we can develop the relationsh­ip between Oslo Bors, DNB and the Norwegian (business) ecosystem,” he said.

Oslo Bors would diversify Euronext’s revenue from shares and derivative trading, given Oslo Bors’ leading position in seafood derivative­s as well as oil services and shipping.

Euronext plans to appoint Oslo Bors’s CEO to its managing board, with responsibi­lity for all commoditie­s operations. It said it would also invite “a leading figure from the Norwegian financial” to its board.

Originally, Euronext was invited to bid by a group of shareholde­rs without informing the management of Oslo Bors, whose board reacted by saying it would seek new bidders.

Euronext, which runs exchanges in Paris, Brussels, Amsterdam, Lisbon and Dublin, is looking to expand but remaining opportunit­ies are scarce as market operators either already belong to large groups or want to remain independen­t.

Large-scale mergers have also met opposition from competitio­n regulators, who have blocked a planned tie-up between Deutsche Boerse and the London Stock Exchange.

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