Daily Mail

People’s revolt over water firm takeover

A mystery investor hands out shares to Dee Valley locals to fight an £84m bid from Severn Trent

- by Rachel Millard

AN ACTIVIST investor has transferre­d hundreds of shares in water firm Dee Valley to local people and employees in a bid to stage a coup over a potential takeover.

The Mail understand­s the shareholde­r, believed to be a Dee Valley employee, bought shares in the company in early December and shortly afterwards transferre­d 445 of them to individual­s.

Dee Valley, which supplies more than 258,000 customers in North-East Wales and the NorthWest, has had a takeover bid by Severn Trent Water approved following a long-running bidding war with investment fund Ancala Fornia.

The £84m deal has the backing of Dee Valley’s board but has been strongly opposed by locals in North Wales and Chester. It is feared Severn Trent’s ownership will lead to job losses, less use of local contractor­s, and worse customer service.

It is thought the mystery investor handed out the stock to encourage a high turnout at a shareholde­r meeting due to be held today.

Last night the board was scrambling to see if the attempted coup was legal, with a High Court hearing scheduled for January 18 to decide whether the transferre­d shareholde­rs’ votes should count.

In the meantime, the vote as scheduled will take place today, but could be overruled.

‘It has come to the attention of the Dee Valley board that a series of approximat­ely 445 recent transfers of small holdings in voting ordinary shares have taken place which may distort the outcome of the shareholde­r vote at the court meeting convened in connection with the scheme,’ Dee Valley said yesterday.

Its board thinks a court should decide on the validity of the transferre­d shareholde­rs’ votes.

Under normal takeover rules every shareholde­r gets one vote per share. So larger shareholde­rs are able to reject takeover bids. The largest shareholde­r in Dee Valley is investment giant Axa with 1.06m, a 25.5pc stake.

The 445 people handed shares have only one each. But according to a scheme of arrangemen­t for Dee Valley, the takeover can only happen if approved by 75pc of total voting shares and, crucially, of individual shareholde­rs.

As a result, the several hundred new shareholde­rs have the power to stall the bid unless the High Court weighs in.

Plaid Cymru’s North Wales Assembly Member Llyr Gruffydd, who is campaignin­g for the company to remain independen­t, said: ‘It’s vital that small shareholde­rs turn up and are not frightened of exercising their democratic right to vote.’

In November, Wrexham’s Labour MP Ian Lucas also expressed concern about the takeover.

The battle over Dee Valley started in October when Ancala had a £78.5m bid accepted before it was trumped by an £84m offer from Severn Trent.

Yesterday Ancala confirmed its offer remained open while Severn Trent said that it believed it was the ‘best long-term owner’ for Dee Valley.

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