Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

2 beer titans’ merger work halts amid new bid, dissent

- DANICA KIRKA

LONDON — SABMiller has suspended work on integratin­g its operations with those of Anheuser-Busch InBev while it reviews AB InBev’s sweetened bid, raising concern about completion of the $104 billion takeover.

The suspension, announced by SABMiller Chief Executive Officer Alan Clark in a memo to employees on Tuesday, came soon after AB InBev increased its cash offer to about $59.50 per share. The higher price was meant to blunt a revolt by investors who had seen the relative value of their payout plummet as the pound declined after Britain’s vote to leave the European Union.

All convergenc­e planning

has been “paused” and there should be no contact with representa­tives of AB InBev, the maker of Budweiser, as SABMiller’s board considers the offer, Clark said in the memo.

“I appreciate this will cause lots of internal and external speculatio­n,” Clark wrote. “However, please stay focused, and I will update you as soon as I am able to.”

One analyst said it was possible that SABMiller was simply moving cautiously.

“We do not consider it a sign SAB is considerin­g changing its recommenda­tion of the transactio­n,” St. Louis-based investment firm Stifel said in a statement. “Rather, we believe it is a symptom of fiduciary duty.”

The pause comes after SABMiller acknowledg­ed that it had been surprised by what AB InBev said was its “final” offer. Under U.K. takeover rules, a final offer can’t be increased.

“The board needs to consider the revised offer, taking into account all facts and circumstan­ces,” Clark wrote.

SABMiller’s board in November accepted, in principle, a deal that would combine the world’s two largest brewers into a company controllin­g nearly a third of the global beer market.

But AB InBev shares, which are denominate­d in euros, have risen 3.2 percent since then and the pound plunged against the European currency after the referendum on Britain’s exit from the EU. That reduced the value of the cash offer compared with a cash-andstock option tailored for U.S. tobacco company Altria and BevCo, an investment vehicle of the Santo Domingo family, which together own about 40 percent of SABMiller and wanted to remain shareholde­rs of the new company.

Aberdeen Asset Management, whose stake in SABMiller is in excess of 1 percent, on Tuesday made plain its unhappines­s with both the new cash offer and the overall situation. It argues that the offer undervalue­s SABMiller and favors the company’s two biggest shareholde­rs.

“The revised deal remains unacceptab­le,” it said in a statement.

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