The $10 billion (€8.46bn) takeover battle for British supermarket group Morrisons between two US private equity groups looks set to be decided by a rarely-used auction process.
Morrisons said on Wednesday it was in talks with Clayton, Dubilier & Rice (CD&R), Fortress Investment Group and Britain’s takeover regulator about an auction to settle its future.
Last month Morrisons agreed a £7 billion (€8.15bn) offer from CD&R, which has former Tesco boss Terry Leahy as a senior adviser. However, the rival consortium led by Softbank-owned Fortress could still trump that bid.
The fight for Britain’s fourth largest grocer after Tesco, Sainsbury’s and Asda is the most high-profile looming takeover amid a raft of bids and counter-bids, reflecting private equity’s appetite for UK Plc.
Morrisons said that as neither bidder had declared its offer final it was talking to both of them and the Takeover Panel about “an orderly framework for the resolution of this competitive situation” – which would typically be an auction.
Morrisons said shareholder meetings to vote on the CD&R offer would be convened for around the week starting October 18th.
It said any auction would take place prior to these shareholder meetings, on a date announced by the Takeover Panel.
Following completion of an auction, Morrisons shareholders would vote on either a Fortress or a CD&R offer depending on which offer Morrisons’ board recommended.
Morrisons said it expected a scheme document on CD&R’s offer to be posted to shareholders around September 25th.
Higher offer
CD&R’s latest offer is worth 285 pence per Morrisons share – a 60 per cent premium to Morrisons’ share price before takeover interest emerged in mid-June.
Morrisons shares were up 0.5 per cent at 292.7 pence at 8.45am, indicating investors are hoping for a higher offer.
Fortress said on Wednesday it “continues to consider its options”.
The Takeover Panel’s standard auction structure is bidding over a five-day period. However, if all parties are in agreement a different structure can be used – for example bidding over just one day.
Last month the Takeover Panel set up an auction of British inhaler company Vectura for suitors Philip Morris International and US private equity firm Carlyle. However, in the event Carlyle decided not to raise its offer. – Reuters