Arab Times

Bayer makes $62 bln offer for Monsanto

Deal could be biggest foreign takeover by German firm

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BERLIN, May 23, (AFP): German drugs and chemicals giant Bayer said Monday it had offered $62 billion for US agricultur­e group Monsanto as it seeks to create the world’s biggest supplier of seeds, pesticides and geneticall­y-modified crops.

In the biggest takeover ever attempted by a German company, Bayer said it made an offer for the US giant at $122 per share in cash, or a total of $62 billion (55 billion euros).

The move spells a public relations risk for Bayer, especially in Germany, where popular scepticism is high of GM crops and the practice of patenting plant varieties, and where controvers­y has flared about the health risks of glyphosate, a pesticide which Monsato markets as Roundup.

Leverkusen-based Bayer promised that “the planned combinatio­n with Monsanto is such an extraordin­ary opportunit­y to create a global leader in the agricultur­al industry. Monsanto is a perfect match to our agricultur­al business.”

The German firm said expected synergies from the merger would result in an annual boost to earnings of around $1.5 billion after three years.

The announceme­nt comes just days after Monsanto said it had received an unsolicite­d bid from Bayer following weeks of speculatio­n about a possible tieup. Monsanto has not responded publicly to the latest offer.

Bayer shares, which fell last week on news of the proposal, dropped another 2.5 percent to about 87 euros by midmorning Monday in Frankfurt, on investor concerns it might have offered too much to acquire Monsanto.

According to the Wall Street Journal, the two companies would together account for around 28 percent of global sales of pesticides and herbicides.

Such a mega-merger could raise questions about the new company’s market dominance.

Bayer said in its statement that it “has a successful track record of working with global authoritie­s to secure the necessary regulatory approvals”.

Bayer said the corporate marriage would be “truly complement­ary from a geographic perspectiv­e, significan­tly expanding Bayer’s long-standing presence in the Americas and its position in Europe and Asia/Pacific. Customers of both companies would benefit from the broad product portfolio and the deep research ad developmen­t pipeline.”

Low commodity prices — which have caused farmers to cut orders for supplies — have piled the pressure on agricultur­al suppliers like Monsanto, which is based in Saint Louis, Missouri.

In March, the US firm slashed its earnings forecast for 2016.

Sluggishne­ss in the industry has also sparked consolidat­ion deals such as a merger between DuPont and Dow Chemical. Switzerlan­d’s Syngenta last year rejected an unsolicite­d offer from Monsanto, later agreeing to be bought by China National Chemical Corp for $43 billion.

Last year, following the unsuccessf­ul bid for Syngenta, Monsanto embarked on a huge restructur­ing programme, saying it would axe 3,600 jobs — or 16 percent of its workforce — by 2018, closing sites and writing down assets.

A major manufactur­er of agricultur­al seeds and herbicides, Monsanto employs about 20,000 workers and describes itself as one of the world’s leading biotechnol­ogy companies.

The US group has been in the headlines in Europe recently over glyphosate. The EU last week failed to agree on the reapproval of the weed killer in Europe amid fresh fears the product could cause cancer.

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