Business Standard

Bayer said to eye bid for $40 bn seed company Monsanto

The firm has held preliminar­y discussion­s internally and with advicers; financing, including potential asset sales, also discussed

- BLOOMBERG London, 12 May

Bayer AG is exploring a potential bid for US competitor Monsanto Co in a deal that would create the world’s largest supplier of seeds and farm chemicals, according to people familiar with the matter. The German firm has held preliminar­y discussion­s internally and with advisers about buying Monsanto, which has a market value of almost $40 billion, said the people, who asked not to be named because the deliberati­ons are private.

Bayer, which is valued at about 84 billion euros ($96 billion), has discussed how to finance a deal including potential asset sales, the people said. No final decision has been made and the Leverkusen-based company could decide against a bid or pursue other transactio­ns with Monsanto, including joint ventures or asset sales, the people said. Representa­tives for Bayer and Monsanto declined to comment.

Putting the world’s largest seed maker together with the German company that invented aspirin would bring together brands such as Roundup, Monsanto’s blockbuste­r herbicide, and Sivanto, a new Bayer insecticid­e lethal to aphids and whiteflies but not to bees, as well as seeds for crops ranging from corn to sugar cane.

Bayer shares fell 2.7 percent to 97.31 euros in Frankfurt trading at 1:56 p.m. Monsanto rose 18 per cent in early trading. The company declined 0.9 per cent to $90.34 in New York trading on Wednesday.

Consolidat­ion Wave

It would also help Bayer and Monsanto bolster their

positions amid a wave of consolidat­ion in the industry. Rivals Dow Chemical Co. and DuPont Co. announced last year plans to combine operations in a $130 billion transactio­n, while China National Chemical Corp. agreed in February to acquire Syngenta

AG of Switzerlan­d for $43 billion. St. Louis-based Monsanto has explored possible deals with Bayer as well as German competitor BASF SE, people familiar with the matter said in March. Bayer and Monsanto have discussed a number of options from a full combinatio­n to the German firm selling all or part of its crop sciences business, as well as joint ventures, the people said at the time. When Bayer raised the idea of a full takeover of Monsanto in March, the U.S. firm said it was not interested in selling, and it sees itself as more of an acquirer, two of the people said this week.

If Bayer goes ahead with a bid, it would raise pressure on BASF to consider an offer, the people said.

Ag Slump

Monsanto is grappling with a global slump in agricultur­al commoditie­s after its offer to buy Syngenta for about $46.2 billion was spurned last year. Sales in the quarter ending in February declined 13 per cent from a year earlier to $4.53 billion. Corn and soybean prices fell in the last three calendar years, cutting net farm income in the US and hurting demand for everything from tractors to weedkiller. A deal with Bayer would help the company reduce its reliance on the agricultur­e industry, while Monsanto would strengthen Bayer’s seed business, one of the company’s priorities. Bayer said last month that it planned to introduce new geneticall­y modified soybean seeds in Brazil to challenge Monsanto’s dominance.

Bayer Transforma­tion

For Bayer, the talks come as the company is transition­ing to new leadership. Strategy head Werner Baumann took over from CEO Marijn Dekkers this month. Dekkers reshaped Bayer, increasing its focus on life sciences by buying Merck & Co.’s over-the-counter medicines business and divesting a stake in its plastics unit. Bayer’s market value has almost doubled since Dekkers took the helm at the end of 2010 as the 152-year-old company sold more prescripti­on drugs for eyes and hearts and added consumer brands like Claritin.

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