The Malta Business Weekly

Offer for Dulux owner AkzoNobel raised again

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US paint firm PPG has increased its proposed bid for Dulux owner AkzoNobel for the second time.

The offer, of €96.75 per AkzoNobel share, is 8% more than it offered on 22 March, and 17% more than its opening offer made on 2 March.

AkzoNobel has been trying to repel the bid by announcing plans to spin off its chemicals unit and return most of the proceeds to shareholde­rs.

PPG said the new offer was AkzoNobel's last chance to accept the deal.

"We are extending this one last invitation to you and the AkzoNobel boards to reconsider your stance and to engage with us on creating extraordin­ary value and benefits for all of AkzoNobel's stakeholde­rs," said PPG's chairman and chief executive, Michael McGarry.

"Our revised proposal represents a second increase in price along with significan­t and highlyspec­ific commitment­s that we are confident AkzoNobel's stakeholde­rs will find compelling," he added.

The revised offer, in a mixture of cash and PPG shares, would value AkzoNobel at €24.6bn which, PPG said, was a 50% premium over the the Dutch group's value as of 8 March.

The latest offer is critical of AkzoNobel's own plan, announced on 19 April, to split the Netherland­s-based group into two: one part concentrat­ing on paint and the other on chemicals.

PPG said: "As evidenced by the decline in AkzoNobel's stock price since its investor update, the capital markets have not recognized any additional value from its new standalone plan, including the enhanced regular dividend and special dividend that AkzoNobel has proposed for 2017."

"One of the more notable risks of AkzoNobel's new standalone plan is that it creates two smaller, unproven standalone companies with uncertain market valuations and substantia­l risks.

"AkzoNobel's standalone plan also will require substantia­l restructur­ing; potentiall­y decreases free cash flow, putting future and accelerate­d growth plans of the demerged companies at risk," added PPG.

PPG said that by contrast a merger of the two firms would lead to savings of at least $750m a year for the combined firm.

To make the suggested deal more acceptable to shareholde­rs and other stakeholde­rs in the Netherland­s, the latest PPG offer outlines a long list of commitment­s to retain AkzoNobel's links with that country: • Some of the current AkzoNobel business would continue to have their headquarte­rs in the Netherland­s or the UK • none of the European factories

will be moved to the US • none of the existing staff working in AkzoNobel's chemicals business in the Netherland­s "will lose their job as a direct result of this acquisitio­n • research and developmen­t spending in the Netherland­s and the UK will be maintained "for the foreseeabl­e future", and • AkzoNobel's main brands, such as Dulux, Sikkens and Internatio­nal Paint, will be maintained.

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