U.S. sues to stop Deere
from buying Precision Planting
Send a link to a friend
[September 01, 2016]
By Diane Bartz and Meredith Davis
WASHINGTON/CHICAGO (Reuters) - The U.S.
Justice Department filed a lawsuit on Wednesday aimed at stopping Deere
& Co from buying Monsanto Co's Precision Planting farm equipment
business, saying that the deal could make it more expensive for farmers
to use fast, precise planting technology.
Deere said in a statement that it would fight the lawsuit and that the
Justice Department's antitrust concerns were "misguided."
Monsanto said in November that it would sell to Deere its Precision
Planting unit, which makes the components of precision planters.
Precision Planting also sells its technology to retrofit older planters
and to other planter manufacturers. Deere has its own precision planting
technology.
The Justice Department said the proposed deal would mean higher prices
for equipment for high-speed precision planting, which allows farmers to
plant row crops like corn up to twice as fast as with conventional
machinery. In February, Deere completed its acquisition of Monosem,
which also makes precision planters.
A massive Deere ExactEmerge planter sells for about $150,000, which
includes components for precision farming, while a Precision Planting
retrofit kit costs about $30,000, J.P. Morgan analyst Ann Duignan
estimated in a research note.
In particular, the Justice Department was concerned about Deere selling
both the big machine planters themselves as well as the technology to
make the big machines.
"By offering farmers high-speed precision planting retrofit kits at a
fraction of the cost of a new planter, Precision Planting posed a
formidable challenge to Deere and its profitable sales of new planters,"
the Justice Department said in its complaint, asking a court to stop the
proposed transaction.
Deere's share price dropped 1.4 percent to close at $84.55 on Wednesday,
while Monsanto slipped 0.9 percent to close at $106.50.
"Precision Planting has been a key innovator in high-speed precision
planting and Deere’s only significant competitor in developing and
selling these technologies," said Renata Hesse, the acting head of the
Justice Department’s Antitrust Division in a press release.
The department estimated Deere and Precision Planting had at least 86
percent of the market. Its complaint put the transaction price at about
$190 million.
[to top of second column] |
Equipment for sale is seen at a John Deere dealer in Denver May 14,
2015. REUTERS/Rick Wilking
Monsanto's unit Climate Corporation, which is selling the Precision Planting
business, said it continued to believe that the sale was good for farmers. "This
transaction will create value by delivering broader access to precision
equipment advancements that help farmers increase yield and productivity,"
Climate Corporation said.
With a glut of used farm equipment, and many U.S. grain farmers cutting budgets
amid stubbornly low commodity prices, both companies had hoped the deal would
tempt farmers to update equipment and buy new farm-data services.
Farm net incomes have steadily fallen since hitting an all-time high of $123.8
billion in 2013, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Farm income is
forecast to fall again this year to $71.5 billion, down nearly 12 percent from
2015, according to USDA data released this week.
Deere's deal for Precision Planting is one of several pending or under
discussion in the sector. ChemChina has struck a $43 billion deal for Swiss
pesticides and seeds group Syngenta while in December Dow and DuPont said
they would combine in an all-stock merger with plans to then break into three
separate businesses.
And there could be more. Canada's Agrium Inc and Potash Corp of Saskatchewan Inc
said on Tuesday they are in talks to merge, as are seed giants Monsanto Co and
Bayer AG .
(Additional reporting by PJ Huffstutter; Editing by Nick Zieminski)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|