| 
						BAT offers to buy U.S. 
						tobacco firm Reynolds in $47 billion deal 
		 Send a link to a friend 
		
		 [October 21, 2016] 
		By Paul Sandle 
 LONDON (Reuters) -
		 
		British 
		American Tobacco  has offered to buy U.S. tobacco company Reynolds 
		American Inc in a $47 billion deal that would bring together Newport, 
		Kent and Pall Mall cigarettes in the world's biggest listed tobacco 
		company.
 
 The takeover would give BAT a leading position in the high-value United 
		States market and more premium brands such as Camel which it can sell in 
		countries including Russia and Turkey where demand for Western 
		cigarettes is still growing.
 
 The British group, which already has a 42 percent stake in Reynolds, 
		said its offer valued the company's shares at $56.50, of which $24.13 
		would be in cash and $32.37 would be in BAT shares, representing a 
		premium of 20 percent over the closing price of Reynolds stock on 
		Thursday.
 
 The total price for the remaining 57.8 percent of Reynolds would be $47 
		billion, of which approximately $20 billion would be in cash and $27 
		billion in BAT shares, BAT said.
 
 BAT Chief Executive Nicandro Durante said the deal would create a U.S. 
		market leader and the world's largest listed tobacco company by net 
		turnover and operating profit.
 
 "The strategic rationale makes perfect sense," Guy Ellison, an analyst 
		at Investec Wealth & Investment, said. The deal would pivot BAT further 
		towards the high value U.S. market, consolidating some strong brands and 
		Reynold's position in "next generation tobacco" products such as 
		e-cigarettes, he added.
 
		
		 
		The cost synergies associated with the proposed merger are estimated by 
		BAT to be relatively modest at around $400 million.
 Reynolds bought Newport-maker Lorillard in 2015, making it a stronger 
		competitor to Marlboro-maker Altria Group <MO.N>. Together, Reynolds and 
		Altria dominate the U.S. market.
 
 Reynolds, based in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, has yet to respond to 
		the unsolicited offer. Because BAT already has such a big holding in the 
		U.S. group, rules set by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission 
		require disclosure of such an approach as soon as it has been made.
 
 WORLD'S BIGGEST
 
 Since Britain's shock vote to leave the European Union in June, shares 
		in BAT soared to all-time highs as investors bet the falling pound would 
		boost the profits of companies that make most of their revenue outside 
		the United Kingdom.
 
 BAT shares, which reached a high of 51.35 pounds in July, were trading 
		up 2.3 percent at 49.34 pounds at 0848 GMT. If successful, the takeover 
		would be one of the biggest this year globally.
 
			
            [to top of second column] | 
            
			
			 
            
			Camel cigarettes are stacked on a shelf inside a tobacco store in 
			New York July 11, 2014. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/File Photo 
            
			 
		
		The tie-up is also one of the only mega deals left in a global tobacco 
		industry which is already dominated by six companies, and it would 
		create the only player with a major presence in both U.S. and 
		international markets.
 A spokesman for Reynolds was not immediately available outside U.S. 
		business hours. BAT is being advised by Centerview, Deutsche Bank and 
		UBS.
 
 SMOKING
 
 Smoking rates in the United States and other western markets are 
		declining, due to increasing health consciousness and greater regulation 
		and taxes. All big tobacco firms are investing in e-cigarettes and other 
		vapor-based products, to diversify.
 
 BAT has in recent years focused on international markets such as 
		Ukraine, Bangladesh, Russia, Vietnam and Turkey where smokers are 
		increasingly choosing premium cigarettes like its Dunhill, Lucky Strike, 
		Pall Mall and Rothmans brands.
 
		
		Its brands are sold in more than 200 markets, with market-leading 
		positions in at least 55.
 Shares in Reynolds fell to a 12-month low on Wednesday of $43.38 after 
		its third quarter earnings were 6 percent short of market forecasts, 
		Jefferies analysts said, on the back of a 1.5 percent fall in domestic 
		cigarette volumes.
 
 BAT also said on Friday it had performed well in the first nine months 
		of the year, raising both revenue at constant rates of exchange and 
		cigarette volumes.
 
 Year-to-date revenue grew 8.1 percent at constant rates of exchange, it 
		said, as its biggest brands sold 9.8 percent more cigarettes.
 
 (Reporting by Paul Sandle and Martinne Geller; editing by Guy 
		Faulconbridge and David Stamp)
 
				 
			[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
			
			
			 |