Arab Times

Anbang abandons $14 billion bid to buy Starwood Hotels

Chinese company dropped out to avoid long bidding war

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LONDON, April 1, (RTRS): China’s Anbang Insurance Group Co said on Thursday it has abandoned its $14 billion bid for Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide Inc, paving the way for Marriott Internatio­nal Inc to buy the Sheraton and Westin hotels operator.

The surprise withdrawal marks an anticlimac­tic end to a bidding war that had pitted Marriott’s ambitions to create the world’s largest lodging company, with about 5,700 hotels, against Anbang’s drive to create a vast portfolio of US real estate assets. It also represents a blow to corporate China’s growing ambitions to acquire US assets. Anbang’s acquisitio­n of Starwood would have been the largest takeover of a US company by a Chinese buyer.

Global

“We were attracted to the opportunit­y presented by Starwood because of its highqualit­y, leading global hotel brands, which met many of our acquisitio­n criteria, including the ability to generate consistent, long-term returns over time,” Anbang said in a statement.

“However, due to various market considerat­ions, the consortium has determined not to proceed further,” Anbang added, referring to the joint bid it had put together with private equity firms J.C. Flowers & Co and Primavera Capital Ltd. Anbang did not offer Starwood a reason for not following through on its raised offer of March 26, according to people familiar with the matter. They asked not to be identified disclosing confidenti­al discussion­s.

“The reason of withdrawal is simple - Anbang isn’t interested in a protracted bidding war,” Fred Hu, chairman of Primavera, told Reuters in an email. It was not immediatel­y clear if Marriott had been planning a counterbid to Anbang’s March 26 offer. Anbang has previously bowed out of smaller deals, but this is the most highprofil­e deal it has abandoned, people familiar with the matter said.

Starwood said on Monday that Anbang had raised its offer to almost $14 billion. Anbang had been expected to firm up that non-binding offer, so that Starwood would formally declare it superior to Marriott’s.

Anbang had already made a $13.2 billion binding and fully financed offer earlier this month, which Starwood accepted as superior. Had Marriott not counterbid on March 21, Starwood would have proceeded with the earlier Anbang offer. Starwood said on Thursday that Anbang had withdrawn its offer “as a result of market considerat­ions,” which it did not specify. Marriott declined to provide immediate comment. The move fueled speculatio­n on what drove Anbang to change course, especially given that many Chinese overseas acquisitio­ns have been encouraged by the country’s authoritie­s.

Chinese financial magazine Caixin reported earlier this month that China’s insurance regulator would likely reject a bid by Anbang to buy Starwood, since it would put the insurer’s offshore assets above a 15 percent threshold for overseas investment­s.

Clinched

Should Anbang have clinched an agreement with Starwood, it would have been scrutinize­d by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), an interagenc­y panel that reviews deals to ensure they do not harm national security. However, sources had said that both Starwood and Anbang believed the deal would have received CFIUS clearance. “My guess is that Starwood wanted either a higher break-up fee, maybe a billion dollars, or a higher price from Anbang to offset the risk,” said Ryan Meliker, an analyst at Canaccord Genuity Group Inc.

In its latest offer, Anbang’s consortium had offered $82.75 per share in cash. Marriott’s latest cash-and-stock offer, which was announced on March 21, is worth around $75 per share.

Starwood shareholde­rs will also receive stock in Interval Leisure Group Inc, worth $6.13 per Starwood share. This is the result of a deal last year to spin off Starwood’s timeshare business and combine it with Interval Leisure Group. Starwood’s shares fell 4.4 percent to $79.80 in extended trading, while Marriott shares fell 4.9 percent to $67.68. This indicates that some Marriott shareholde­rs are disappoint­ed that the company is moving ahead with the deal at such a high price.

Anbang was establishe­d in 2004 as an automotive and property insurer by Chairman Wu Xiaohui, a native of China’s entreprene­urial coastal city Wenzhou. The company has been leveraging its 1.65 trillion yuan ($253 billion) in assets to transform into a worldwide investor.

Anbang’s major deals include last year’s $1.95 billion purchase of Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York and this month’s agreement to buy Strategic Hotels & Resorts Inc, from Blackstone Group LP for $6.5 billion. Anbang’s purchase of US insurer Fidelity & Guaranty Life for $1.6 billion is awaiting regulatory approval.

Marriott said last week it believed it could achieve $250 million in annual cost synergies within two years after closing the deal with Starwood, up from $200 million estimated in November 2015 when it signed its original merger agreement.

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