Refusal of the offer, made public on Wednesday after earlier
proposals were refused privately, opens the door to a week of
intense wrangling before an Oct. 14 deadline for a formal bid set by
the UK takeover panel.
The deal would be one of the biggest in corporate history, uniting
the maker of Budweiser, Corona and Stella Artois beers with that of
Peroni, Grolsch and Pilsner Urquell. The combined entity would make
nearly a third of the world's beer.
AB InBev realistically needs access to SAB's private financial data
if it is to make an informed formal bid, but said that so far the
board had not engaged meaningfully.
A deadline extension can be granted if SABMiller asks for it, and AB
InBev wants shareholders to lobby the company.
"The deadline is approaching and we thought we should make it
public," AB InBev CEO Carlos Brito said on a conference call. "Now
it's up to the shareholders to have a look at it. If they think this
is a good offer, they should act and encourage the board to engage."
Brito said he was committed to a friendly deal, but did not rule out
going hostile.
"I don't want to go there now. I think there's too much to be gained
in the next few days," he said.
SHAREHOLDER RESPONSE
Belgium-based AB InBev went public with its offer of 42.15 pounds in
cash per SABMiller share, after the board rejected two prior
approaches, at 38 and 40 pounds. The offer includes a discounted
cash-and-share alternative designed only for SAB's two largest
shareholders, Altria Group <MO.N> and BevCo.
The discount aims to satisfy their desire to avoid huge taxes on
cash gains and ensure all other shareholders accept cash, which
would be financed with the help of a $70 billion debt package being
lined up.
Altria, the tobacco group which has 26.6 percent of SABMiller, said
it supported the bid and would be prepared to opt for the share
alternative.
AB InBev said it lacked the support of BevCo, controlled by the
Santo Domingo family of Colombia. Representatives for BevCo, which
owns about 13 percent of SABMiller, could not be reached by Reuters.
BevCo has two seats on the SABMiller board.
SABMiller said its board, excluding the three members nominated by
Altria, unanimously rejected the proposal.
"It still very substantially undervalues SABMiller, its unique and
unmatched footprint, and its standalone prospects," the UK-based
company said in a statement.
SABMiller Chairman Jan du Plessis called his company "the crown
jewel of the global brewing industry" and said AB InBev's proposals
were designed to be unattractive to many shareholders.
Lawyers not involved in the deal interpreted SAB's language as
implying that it could want as much as 10 percent more than the
proposed price, which amounts to a 44 percent premium to SAB's share
price before news of AB InBev's approach was made public on Sept.
16.
[to top of second column] |
AB InBev's CEO called the price "full" and said SAB's board was
"over-optimistic" about its standalone prospects, saying the company
would need an almost 50 percent jump in operating earnings in U.S.
dollars to make up the value he is offering and that would likely
not happen for at least three or four years.
The cash-and-share alternative, which is technically open to all
shareholders, would give them 2.37 pounds per share plus 0.48
special unlisted AB InBev shares that are convertible into ordinary
stock after a five-year lock-up period.
Given that AB InBev intends to use this instrument to acquire the
stakes of Altria and BevCo, which together own about 41 percent of
the company, SABMiller said the implied price tag was only 40.21
pounds per share, or 65 billion pounds ($99.53 billion).
RBC Capital Markets analysts said the proposal appeared some way
below a "knock-out" bid, and Bernstein Securities said a higher bid,
and acceptance, was the most likely outcome.
SABMiller shares closed up 0.3 percent at 37.24 pounds, while AB
InBev closed up 0.6 percent in Brussels at 98.65 euros.
AFRICA THE PRIZE
Analysts have long seen this deal as the likely end-game for decades
of industry consolidation, as the big four - AB InBev, SABMiller,
Heineken and Carlsberg already brew over half the world's beer.
It would add Africa and certain Latin American and Asian breweries
to AB InBev's presence across the Americas.
"We believe Africa in particular will be a key driver for the joint
company in the future," Brito said.
AB InBev also said it planned to establish a secondary share listing
and regional headquarters in Johannesburg, where SABMiller has a
secondary listing, which local investors have said they want
retained.
Public Investment Corp, a South African state-owned firm with a 3.4
percent stake in SABMiller, said the listing addressed one of its
concerns and that it would wait for guidance from SABMiller's board.
AB InBev, partly controlled by 3G Capital, a private equity fund run
by a group of Brazilian investors, has a strong track record for
takeovers, followed by keen cost-cutting, but Brito declined to say
what potential synergies a SABMiller deal might realise.
(Additional reporting by Robert-Jan Bartunek in Brussels, Aastha
Agnihotri in Bengaluru and Martinne Geller in London; Editing by
Gopakumar Warrier, Greg Mahlich and Adrian Croft)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |