THISDAY

Olam Reduces Acquisitio­n Price for Dangote Flour from N130bn to N120bn

- Goddy Egene

Olam Internatio­nal Limited, a Singaporea­n agro-allied company, which had offered to acquire Dangote Flour Mill (DFM) Plc for N130 billion yesterday announced a reduction of the bid price to N120 billion.

DFM had in April notified the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE), said Olam had offered to acquire its five billion shares was N130 billion, through its subsidiary Crown Flour Mills(CFM).

However, in DFM, in another notificati­on to the NSE yesterday, said it received from CFM and Olam, an addendum dated August 1, 2019 to the bidding offer dated April 23, 2019 made to DFM by Olam to acquire all the outstandin­g and issued shares of DFM that are not owned by Olam through CFM.

“As reported in the earlier announceme­nt of April 23, 2019, the total considerat­ion of N130 billion offered by Olam for the entire five billion shares was to be adjusted inter alia(i) for net working capital and net debt as at March 31, 2019 or any other later date that may be agreed by Olam and board of DFM and (ii) to exclude shares held by Olam through its subsidiary, CFM to arrive at the final price payable to shareholde­rs of DFM. By the addendum, CFM has now submitted a revised offer with a final considerat­ion of N120 billion amounting to N24 only per ordinary share following the adjustment­s,” DFM said.

Before now, a director of DFM, Mr. Thabo Mabe, had said the transactio­n would be on the basis of debt free, cash free, payable in cash at the closing of the proposed transactio­n.

“If the conditions of the transactio­ns are satisfied and sanctioned by the court, the company would be delisted from NSE,” the company had added.

Tiger Brands, a South African firm had in 2012 bought a 63 per cent stake in Dangote Flour and pasta maker, but few years down the line the Dangote Group bought back the company after the new owners sustained losses repeatedly on its operations.

Meanwhile, trading at the stock market opened the week on a positive note as investors embarked on bargain hunting. Consequent­ly, the NSE All-Share Index appreciate­d by 0.14 per cent to close at 27,672.29, while market capitalisa­tion added N13.5 billion to close at N13.5 trillion.

However, activity level was mixed as volume traded advanced 73.7 per cent to 280.7 million shares s while value traded declined by 70.7 per cent to N1.4 billion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria