Khaleej Times

Akzo Nobel rejects PPG’s $24b bid

- Ellen Proper

amsterdam — Akzo Nobel NV spurned a sweetened, €22.4 billion ($24.2 billion) takeover offer from PPG Industries Inc, marking the second time that Europe’s largest coatings company has rebuffed an overture from its US competitor.

PPG is offering Akzo holders cash and stock valued at €88.72 a share, the Amsterdam-based company said in a statement on Wednesday. The original bid valued the Dutch company at €83 a share at the end of February. As with the initial bid, which Akzo rejected March 9, the target said the latest offer is too low and not in the interests of shareholde­rs and would lead to job losses. The new proposal doesn’t warrant Akzo engaging in discussion­s with PPG, Akzo said.

“This proposal significan­tly fails to recognize the value of Akzo Nobel,” chief executive officer Ton Buechner said in the statement. “Our boards do not believe it is in the best interest of Akzo Nobel’s stakeholde­rs, including our shareholde­rs, customers and employees. That is why we have rejected it unanimousl­y.”

With the higher bid, Buechner will face growing pressure to negotiate with Pittsburgh-based PPG. One of the Dutch company’s biggest longterm investors was urging Akzo to carefully evaluate any new offer, people familiar with the shareholde­r’s position said earlier, asking not to be identified because the discussion­s aren’t public. Elliott Management, the hedge fund founded by billionair­e Paul Singer, also was pushing Akzo to talk with PPG, people familiar with those talks said last week.

Akzo fell 3.3 per cent to €74.05 at 10:35am in Amsterdam, after closing at a record on Tuesday.

“There have been various opinions among shareholde­rs. It was our responsibi­lity to balance these and we came to this decision,” Buechner said on a call with reporters, adding that Akzo has been actively reaching out to investors to discuss the bids.

The latest offer is “inappropri­ate” and has been clearly and pragmatica­lly considered, he said, declining to speculate about the possibilit­y of a third proposal from PPG or a hostile offer. “It remains to be see how far Akzo wants to go to defend itself against PPG,” KBC Securities analyst Wim Hoste said in a note.

In rejecting the original €20.9 billion bid, Akzo said it plans to divest its specialty chemicals business, which accounts for one-third of revenue, to increase the focus on coatings. PPG’s proposals would lead to a company with too much debt, and the combinatio­n would require “substantia­l” divestitur­es to gain approval from antitrust regulators, Akzo said. The company is pushing ahead with a breakup, Akzo said on Wednesday.

“We are convinced that Akzo Nobel is best placed to unlock the value within our company ourselves,” Buechner said in the statement. “We are executing our plan, including the creation of two focused businesses and new cost structure, and believe this gives us a strong platform for continued profitabil­ity and long-term value creation for all our stakeholde­rs with substantia­lly less execution risks.”

Akzo will provide updated financial guidance and hold an investor briefing soon, the company said.

A combinatio­n of the world’s two largest coatings companies would attract intense antitrust scrutiny in Europe and the US They have leading market shares of architectu­ral paint in many European countries, with Akzo making brands such as Dulux and Hammerite and PPG producing Olympic and Pittsburgh brands.

The combinatio­n also would control more than half of the global aerospace-coatings market. Akzo has the No. 1 market position in general-industrial coatings and protective and marine coatings, while PPG has the No. 2 position in those markets, according to SunTrust analysts James Sheehan and Matthew Stevenson. — Bloomberg

 ?? Bloomberg ?? In rejecting the original €20.9 billion bid, Akzo said it plans to divest its specialty chemicals business, which accounts for onethird of revenue, to increase the focus on coatings. —
Bloomberg In rejecting the original €20.9 billion bid, Akzo said it plans to divest its specialty chemicals business, which accounts for onethird of revenue, to increase the focus on coatings. —

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