Bangkok Post

Osram takeover fight set for next round

- OLIVER SACHGAU

MUNICH: The battle for control of Osram Licht AG is set to enter a new round after Austria’s AMS AG vowed to keep fighting after a sweetened €4 billion ($4.4 billion) offer failed.

AMS, a supplier to Apple Inc, will seek a regulator nod to raise its 19.99% stake in Osram.

As the biggest shareholde­r in the German lighting maker, AMS’s approval has become key for any would-be rival bidder.

Osram has said private equity investors Bain Capital and Advent Internatio­nal are inspecting its books with a plan to make an offer.

“We doubt private equity will launch a superior bid given AMS has built up a 19.99% stake in the meantime,” Commerzban­k said in a note. “While we cannot rule out that AMS might make another push, timing is yet unclear, so we attach a greater likelihood to a potential cooperatio­n only.”

German takeover law doesn’t allow a new bid within one year unless the target gives its consent, as well as stipulatin­g that an offer needs to be made if an investor crosses a 30% ownership threshold.

AMS’s pursuit took a setback on Friday, when it announced its offer failed to attract enough support from shareholde­rs. Osram investors had tendered only 51.6% of their shares, short of a 62.5% threshold.

Osram fell as much as 4.5% to €39, the most in two months, while shares of AMS declined as much as 5.8%.

AMS’s failed bid extends a period of protracted uncertaint­y for Osram, which emerged as a takeover target last year after warning trade friction and a cooling of the car industry had clouded the outlook for 2019.

The former division of Siemens AG gets about half of its revenue from the automotive sector. Subsequent profit warnings further eroded investor confidence, sending shares tumbling until the takeover battle took hold.

Osram confirmed talks with Bain and Carlyle, which was later replaced by Advent, in February after they were first reported by Bloomberg News.

A bidding war broke out in July when AMS lobbed a higher offer.

The Austrian company has drawn criticism from Osram unions and employee representa­tives on the board, as well as management due to concerns about promised synergies as well as the deal’s financing.

Following the months-long takeover battle against private equity suitors, AMS said the combinatio­n remained compelling and pledged to continue to “explore strategic options” for a takeover.

“Bain and Advent are inspecting Osram’s books with a view to submitting an offer,” Osram said in a separate statement.

AMS, a supplier of facial recognitio­n technology for Apple’s iPhone, has said it would invest in the company’s Regensburg, Germany site that makes high-tech chip components, but would sell the digital division that makes lighting controls, stage and theater lights.

Century-old Osram, based in Munich, started out making light bulbs, pivoting in recent years under chief executive Olaf Berlien to products like iris scanners and infrared emitters.

The refocus was contentiou­s, leading to a boardroom clash over strategy and a public spat with Siemens before the German engineerin­g giant sold down its stake.

 ?? REUTERS ?? An AMS technician shows samples of sensor wafers at the company’s factory in Unterprems­taetten, Austria.
REUTERS An AMS technician shows samples of sensor wafers at the company’s factory in Unterprems­taetten, Austria.

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