How four words rewrote
Bayer-Monsanto deal script
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[May 28, 2016]
By Tom Polansek and Greg Roumeliotis
(Reuters) - "There is nothing there."
Monsanto Co President Brett Begemann uttered those words last week to a
small group of investors and a Reuters reporter when asked how the
world's largest seed company he helps lead might fit with German drugs
and crop chemicals group Bayer AG.
Those four words, said on the sidelines of a New York conference,
set off a series of events leading to the disclosure of Bayer's
confidential, $62 billion bid for Monsanto, the largest all-cash
corporate takeover offer on record.
Bayer had sent a confidential acquisition proposal to Monsanto on
May 10. Media reports surfaced two days later that Bayer was
considering a bid.
Initially, neither company would comment on whether any talks were
taking place - a common practice for many corporations that prefer
to negotiate deals in private and only tell Wall Street if they
manage to come to terms.
But Begemann appeared to go a step further than simply declining to
comment at the May 18 conference. Monsanto's securities lawyer was
concerned that his reply could be interpreted as a denial that any
talks were going on, according to a person with knowledge of the
situation.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has strict disclosure
rules to protect investors from being misled by companies. To avoid
triggering SEC scrutiny, according to the source, Monsanto issued a
statement a few hours after Begemann's comment to acknowledge that
Bayer had approached the company about a possible takeover.
Bayer soon followed with its own statement. The negotiations have
since been subject to intense investor scrutiny that has weighed on
Bayer's deliberations over how much it can pay, according to sources
with knowledge of the talks.
The SEC declined to comment on whether it is looking into Begemann's
remark.
Monsanto and Bayer also declined to comment, and Monsanto did not
make Begemann available for comment. His remark was characterized by
sources close to Monsanto as an "honest mistake."
Begemann came "close to a violation but probably not enough" for the
SEC to bring a case, because his answer was open to interpretation,
said Peter Henning, a law professor at Wayne State University in
Michigan.
Begemann's statement could be interpreted to mean that Monsanto and
Bayer had not come to a definitive agreement, Henning added.
CHARM OFFENSIVE
Bayer shares, which fell modestly after the initial media reports,
dropped as much as 10 percent the day after the company confirmed
the takeover approach, as investors fretted over the impact of such
an acquisition on its strategy and balance sheet. Some of Bayer
shareholders spoke out against doing a deal.
To address those investor concerns, Bayer on Monday unveiled the
terms: it had offered $62 billion in cash for Monsanto, and it would
finance 25 percent of the bid primarily through a rights offering
that would dilute existing shareholders.
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A Monsanto logo is pictured in the company headquarters in Morges,
Switzerland, May 25, 2016. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
Before Monsanto publicly responded, Bayer embarked on a highly
unusual investor charm offensive, launching a website and holding
presentations. Chief Executive Werner Baumann also gave several
media interviews.
"Because of the Monsanto President’s remark, Bayer’s CEO now has to fight a
battle on two fronts, negotiating a deal with Monsanto while also trying to keep
his shareholders onboard," said Erik Gordon, a professor at the University of
Michigan's Ross School of Business.
"It can be an easier pitch to investors when they know they can no longer
influence negotiations, and a deal is presented as fait accompli," he said.
On Tuesday, Monsanto rejected Bayer's offer but agreed to hold further talks
with Bayer to see if they can agree on better terms. The two companies will now
try to carry out negotiations privately, without making further statements until
there is an outcome, according to the sources.
INVESTOR FEEDBACK MIXED
Though the negotiations continued after Begemann's comments, some sources close
to Bayer said the company felt more restricted on how much more money it can
offer Monsanto, given the investor feedback it received. By Friday, Bayer shares
ended down 11 percent from where they were before Monsanto disclosed the
approach.
To be sure, overcoming such challenges is possible.
"Sophisticated investors understand that deal premiums need to be evaluated"
against the stock price before news of negotiations break, said Steven
Scheinfeld, global chair of the corporate department of law firm Fried, Frank,
Harris, Shriver & Jacobson LLP in New York.
Even transactions that have become public often get to the finish line, he
added.
The fact that Monsanto's shares were trading at around $110 - significantly
below Bayer's $122 offer price due to uncertainty about the deal - is in Bayer's
favor. Monsanto shares were at $97 before Bayer disclosed its offer.
Some Bayer shareholders have been positive about the deal. For example, Royal
London Asset Management said that the German company's bid for Monsanto made
sense strategically, and that, as a shareholder, it would support a deal if it
was priced at around $130-$135 per share.
(Reporting by Tom Polansek in Chicago and Greg Roumeliotis in New York;
Additional reporting by PJ Huffstutter in Chicago, Sarah Lynch in Washington
D.C. and Rod Nickel in New York; Editing by Edward Tobin and Tiffany Wu)
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