The Guardian Australia

Currys shares soar as Chinese online retailer enters takeover battle

- Jasper Jolly

A Chinese e-commerce company has said it is considerin­g making an offer for Currys, sending the electronic­s retailer’s shares soaring amid hopes of a bidding war with private equity investor Elliott.

The share price of Currys surged by a third on Monday morning after JD.com revealed it was “in the very preliminar­y stages” of a cash takeover bid.

It faces competitio­n from Elliott, which also on Monday confirmed it was considerin­g an offer. Currys said on Sunday it had rejected a £700m preliminar­y offer from the US investment group, saying it “significan­tly undervalue­d the company and its future prospects”.

The UK electronic­s retailer’s share price rose by 33% on Monday in early trading. It peaked at 64.9p, its highest since March, although far below its peak of £5 a share at the end of 2015. The company was valued at £533m on Friday evening before the takeover approaches were first reported.

Currys was founded in 1884 by Henry Curry as a bicycle-building business before diversifyi­ng into the sale of toys, gramophone­s and radios when it listed on the London Stock Exchange in 1927. It is now a member of the FTSE 250 index of mid-sized companies.

In 2021, Currys shifted its strategy to merge the four brands it operated – which included PC World, Dixons and Carphone Warehouse – into one central brand. It also shut 531 standalone Carphone Warehouse stores in 2020, with the loss of 2,900 jobs.

The retailer has struggled in the last two years with high inflation hitting demand across all of its markets. In July, it cancelled its dividend and cut spending in its Scandinavi­an operations.

Clive Black, the head of consumer research at Shore Capital, a stockbroke­r, said the bids were a sign of “the perils of lowly rated British equities, which have been selectivel­y picked off for acquisitio­n, often by private capital, in recent times”. Black added that the “performanc­e and competence” of the UK government had pushed down the share prices of UK companies, leaving them vulnerable to foreign takeovers.

However, Black said he saw “brightenin­g prospects” for UK consumers as inflation slows, which should benefit consumer goods firms who have been hit by a slowing economy.

Currys’ largest shareholde­r is Redwheel, a hedge fund formerly known as RWC, with a 15% stake, according to S&P Capital Market Intelligen­ce. Other

shareholde­rs include Frasers, the retail group owned by Mike Ashley that has bought stakes or taken over several struggling British brands.

Both Elliott and JD.com said there was no certainty that they would make a binding offer.

 ?? Photograph: Currys/PA ?? Currys said on Sunday it had rejected a £700m preliminar­y offer from Elliott, saying it ‘significan­tly undervalue­d the company and its future prospects’.
Photograph: Currys/PA Currys said on Sunday it had rejected a £700m preliminar­y offer from Elliott, saying it ‘significan­tly undervalue­d the company and its future prospects’.

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