Khaleej Times

Dutch considerin­g law to protect companies from foreign takeover

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amsterdam — The Netherland­s government on Saturday said it is considerin­g a law that would give Dutch publicly listed companies a one-year period of “thinking time” during which they could freely reject any approach by a foreign buyer.

The announceme­nt by Economic Affairs Minister Henk Kamp comes amid a surge in nationalis­t and protection­ist sentiment in the Netherland­s.

It also comes as US paint-maker PPG Industries seeks to buy Dutch based rival Akzo Nobel with a €26.3 billion ($29.47 billion) offer that is widely backed by the company’s foreign shareholde­r base but opposed by the company’s Dutch-controlled board.

Kamp has said a takeover of Akzo Nobel is not in the Dutch national interest.

The idea of a one-year cool-down period when a foreign company tries to buy a Dutch one has enjoyed backing from several prominent Dutch business leaders, notably former Shell CEO Jeroen van der Veer, and from a range of political parties on the right and left.

There is also a backlash among several academics and thinkers who ridicule the idea and say it risks trashing the country’s reputation as a place to do business.

Kamp said the government is still investigat­ing whether such a law is feasible and will consult with “experts and those involved.”

If the law is enacted it is unlikely it would effect the Akzo Nobel case. A court is due on Monday to hear complaints from Akzo shareholde­rs who are seeking the removal of Chairman Antony Burgmans.

PPG must decide by June 1 whether it will file formal bidding papers — along with proof it can finance a bid — to Dutch regulators.

It argues Akzo’s reluctance to enter talks on a merger is hypocritic­al, given that the multinatio­nal company itself grew by foreign takeovers, notably of Sweden’s Nobel and Britain’s ICI. Of the company’s 46,000 employees, only 5,000 are Dutch, and of its shareholde­rs, 93 per cent are foreign.

Akzo argues that PPG’s takeover would lead to job losses, that its own corporate values are more focused on sustainabi­lity, and that it has a better corporate plan to sell its chemicals division and issue more dividends to shareholde­rs.

Akzo CEO Ton Buechner has also advanced the argument that keeping multinatio­nals headquarte­red in the Netherland­s is vital to the country’s economic ecosystem, as they provide a disproport­ionate amount of investment in research and developmen­t. — Reuters

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? US paint-maker PPG Industries seeks to buy Dutch based rival Akzo Nobel with a €26.3 billion offer.
— Bloomberg US paint-maker PPG Industries seeks to buy Dutch based rival Akzo Nobel with a €26.3 billion offer.

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