Scottish Daily Mail

Another wave of takeover fever grips the Square Mile

- By Calum Muirhead

A wAve of takeover fever gripped the City as bids emerged for several major firms.

The main event was a £5bn offer for Boots by a consortium comprised of US private equity outfit Apollo and Reliance Industries, the conglomera­te headed by Indian tycoon Mukesh Ambani.

However, there were bids afoot elsewhere with transport firm First Group announcing it has rebuffed an approach from Miamibased I Squared Capital.

The FTSe 250 bus and train operator, whose work includes running the Avanti west Coast mainline and South western Railways, concluded the £1.2bn cash offer ‘significan­tly undervalue­s’ the company.

The bid comprised 118p per share plus an extra 45.6p which would be paid under certain conditions. However, First said the approach ‘does not provide shareholde­rs with sufficient certainty’ and as a result, its board ‘unanimousl­y rejected’ the proposal.

First shares were down 1.2pc, or 1.7p, to 135p on the news as investors appeared unconvince­d by the prospect of a fresh approach.

Meanwhile, private hospital firm Mediclinic revealed it too had turned down a takeover swoop.

The group was approached with a £3.4bn offer by a consortium including its largest shareholde­r Remgro, the investment vehicle of the billionair­e Rupert family in South Africa.

But Mediclinic’s board concluded the 460p per share proposal ‘significan­tly undervalue­d’ the company.

Despite the rejection, Mediclinic’s shares surged 2.6pc, or 11.2p, to 436.2p, suggesting the market believed the takeover tussle was not yet over. elsewhere, an ongoing battle over ad agency M&C Saatchi continued to rumble on.

Next Fifteen (down 2.2pc, or 24p, to 1062p), the media firm that struck a £310m deal to buy M&C last month, said its bid would not increase its bid.

The statement came after rival bidder AdvancedAd­vT, the vehicle controlled by tech entreprene­ur vin Murria who was recently ousted a deputy chairman of M&C, questioned whether Next Fifteen’s offer undervalue­d the company. M&C Saatchi shares fell 3.5pc, or 7p, to 195p.

The FTSE 100 was down 1.5pc, or 116.79, to 7476.21 and the FTSE 250 slipped 1.2pc, or 237.59 points, to 20073.4. Fears of a global economic slowdown continued to weigh on the market following bleak forecasts from the world Bank and the OeCD.

Plans by the european Central Bank to start raising interest rates from next month in a bid to tackle inflation were also expected to pump the brakes on growth.

Matters were not helped by reports parts of Shanghai had reintroduc­ed lockdown measures, sparking concerns China could reverse its recent easing of restrictio­ns.

The FTSe 100 was also held back by several of its constituen­ts going ex-dividend, with Sainsbury’s down 5.9pc, or 13p, at 209.4p, Primark-owner AB Foods falling 3.3pc, or 56p, to 1652p and WPP shedding 4.5pc, or 41p, to 871.8p.

Retail stocks were on the slide as the British Chambers of Commerce warned economic growth would grind to a halt this year while Pepco, the owner of unlisted chain Poundland, warned customers were cutting back on essentials amid the cost of living crisis.

B&Q-owner Kingfisher dropped 3.6pc, or 9.2p, to 246.7p, B&M slumped 1.6pc, or 5.9p, to 368.5p, Ocado fell 3.9pc, or 37.2p, to 915.4p, Howdens lost 1.6pc, or 10.6p, to 662.2p and Dunelm declined by 3.8pc, or 33p, to 835.5p.

Adding to the misery was sofa seller DFS, which fell 11.9pc, or 22p, to 163p after warning demand for its furniture dropped as household spending was squeezed.

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