The Palm Beach Post

Bayer closes on $63 billion Monsanto deal

- By Naomi Kresge

Bayer closed its $63 billion acquisitio­n of Monsanto Co., emerging from an arduous twoyear antitrust review as the biggest seed and agricultur­al chemicals maker in the world.

The deal’s closing is just the beginning of another tough task: knitting the two companies together.

Integratio­n should begin in about two months, once the sale of some of Bayer’s agricultur­e assets to BASF is complete.

The combined unit will be based in Monheim, Germany, while the North American business and seeds division will be led from St. Louis.

The transactio­n, which will double the size of Bayer’s agricultur­e business, means “we will be even better placed to help the world’s farmers grow more healthy and affordable food in a sustainabl­e manner,” Bayer Chairman Werner Baumann said in a statement on Thursday.

Bayer has sold off its plastics business and remade itself into a life-science company with half its sales from health and half from agricultur­e.

The takeover also marks the third in a series of mega-deals in the industry, following Dow Chemical’s merger with DuPont Co. and China National Chemical Corp.’s takeover of Syngenta.

To soothe regulators’ concerns about whether enough competitor­s would remain in the market, Bayer agreed to sell about 7.6 billion euros ($9 billion) in assets to BASF.

They include field seeds as well as Bayer’s vegetable-seeds business, some seed treatments and digital farming projects.

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