The Scotsman

Morrisons suitor pulls out of solo bid to team up with private equity rival in multi-billion-pound consortium

- By SCOTT REID

Private equity firm Apollo Asset Management, which confirmed it was considerin­g a bid for Morrisons earlier this month, will no longer be making an offer for the supermarke­t chain.

Instead, Apollo announced that it was in early discussion­s with rival private equity outfit Fortress to team up and become part of its consortium to buy the grocery major.

Fortress is owned by Softbank and made a £6.3 billion offer for the chain, which was accepted by the board, and is part of a consortium which also includes the Canada Pensionpla­n investment board and Koch Real Estate Investment­s, the vehicle of the US billionair­e Charles Koch.

Apollo said the talks “may result in funds managed or advised by Apollo forming part of the investment group led by Fortress for the purposes of the Fortress offer. As a consequenc­e of these discussion­s, Apollo confirms that it does not intend to make an offer for morris ons other than as part of the Fortress offer.” It added: “Apollo notes Fortress’s intentions regarding the Morrisons business and all its stakeholde­rs, as set out in the announceme­nt of the fortress offer… should these discussion­s lead to any transactio­n, Apollo would be fully supportive of Fortress’s stated intentions.”

The takeover battle for the supermarke­t business – the UK’S fourth largest behind Tesco, Sainsbury’s and Asda – started last month when New York private equity firm Clayton, Dubilier & Rice (CD&R) made a proposed £5.5bn bid, though this was rejected.

Asda was recently acquired in a bumper £6.8bn takeover by forecourt tycoons the Issa brothers and private equity firm TDR Capital.

Sophie Lund-yates, senior equity analyst at financial services group Hargreaves Lansdown, said: “Apollo is laying down its weapons and potentiall­y joining forces with the Fortress-led syndicate.

“From a shareholde­r perspectiv­e this is disappoint­ing, because it takes the heat out of a potential bidding war, meaningthe cash offer already on the table is less likely to get pushed upwards. Morrisons is a mixed bag of challenges and opportunit­ies. Its online business is smaller than rivals, meaning Covid hit particular­ly hard. As more of a value option, it’s also more at risk from competitio­n from the german discounter­s ..”

 ??  ?? 0 Softbank had made a £6.3bn offer for Morrisons
0 Softbank had made a £6.3bn offer for Morrisons

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