The Star Late Edition

AstraZenec­a turns down a sweeter deal

Prospect mounts of hostile bid by Pfizer

- Ben Hirschler

DRUG maker Pfizer increased its offer for AstraZenec­a to £63 billion (R1.112 trillion) on Friday, but the British company promptly rejected the proposal to create the world’s biggest pharmaceut­ical company.

AstraZenec­a’s board said the offer undervalue­d the company “substantia­lly” and was not an adequate basis on which to engage with its suitor.

Industry analysts and investors said that raised the possibilit­y that Pfizer would now take the takeover plan direct to AstraZenec­a shareholde­rs.

The US group would much prefer an agreed deal, since hostile takeovers typically take longer, result in a higher final price and carry more risks because the bidder cannot access the target’s books to assess its business.

One AstraZenec­a investor said Pfizer management had made it clear in meetings this week that it wanted a friendly deal but it was determined to the see the transactio­n completed and a hostile bid was a potential “tool”.

While Pfizer has given assurances to the British government on retaining drug research in Britain, a spokesman for Prime Minister David Cameron said AstraZenec­a’s fate would be determined by shareholde­rs, not the state.

Friday’s £50-a-share indicative offer followed the decision by AstraZenec­a to rebuff an earlier proposal that valued it at £58.8bn, or £46.61 share.

Some investors and analysts had expected that the sweetened offer would be enough to bring AstraZenec­a’s board to the negotiatin­g table, even if it was not accepted, and the swift rejection suggests Pfizer may now go over the board’s head.

“It’s making it increasing­ly likely that Pfizer is going to come back with a hostile bid,” said Mick Cooper, analyst at Edison Investment Research.

Leading investors met Pfizer chief executive Ian Read in London last week and some feel that an offer of £50 or above is certainly worth discussing. them 32 percent cash and 68 percent shares, little different from the original 30-70 split.

Pfizer’s latest proposal would have seen shareholde­rs receiving, for each AstraZenec­a share, 1.845 shares in the combined company and £15.98 in cash.

Many analysts are convinced Pfizer will raise its offer again, not least because it wants to get the deal done before any possible change in US tax rules that might prevent it moving its tax base to Britain.

Commenting on the offer, AstraZenec­a chairman Leif Johansson said: “Pfizer’s proposal would dramatical­ly dilute AstraZenec­a shareholde­rs’ exposure to our unique pipeline and would create risks around its delivery.”

He also highlighte­d the fact that the small cash component would leave investors exposed to the risks faced by Pfizer in executing an ambitious megamerger.

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PHOTO: BLOOMBERG
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