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						Becton Dickinson to 
						acquire Bard for $24 billion 
			
   
            
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		[April 24, 2017] By 
		Carl O'Donnell and Jonathan Spicer 
			
		NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. medical equipment 
		supplier Becton Dickinson and Co will acquire C R Bard Inc, in a $24 
		billion cash-and-stock deal, adding Bard's devices to its portfolio in 
		the high-growth sectors of oncology and surgery, both companies said on 
		Sunday. 
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			 The deal comes two years after Becton Dickinson acquired CareFusion 
			Corp for $12 billion. It is the latest in a string of deals in the 
			medical technology sector, as manufacturers turn to acquisitions to 
			boost profit margins. 
			 
			"We are confident that this combination will deliver meaningful 
			benefits for customers and patients, as we see opportunities to 
			leverage Becton Dickinson's leadership, especially in medication 
			management and infection prevention," Bard Chief Executive Officer 
			Tim Ring said in a statement. 
			 
			The deal values Bard at $317 per share, a 25 percent premium over 
			Friday's close of trading. Bard shareholders stand to receive 
			$222.93 in cash and 0.5077 shares of Becton Dickinson for each of 
			their shares, the companies said. This would lead to Bard 
			shareholders owning about 15 percent of the combined company. 
			
			  
			Becton Dickinson said the deal with Bard will expand its focus on 
			the treatment of disease states beyond diabetes, to include 
			peripheral vascular disease, urology, hernia and cancer. 
			 
			"We will be able to partner (with providers) on fundamental 
			treatment processes in a way that no one else can," Becton Dickinson 
			CEO Vincent Forlenza said in an interview. 
			 
			Becton Dickinson, based in Franklin Lakes, New Jersey, said it 
			expected the acquisition to boost non-U.S. growth options in markets 
			such as China, and to raise per-share earnings in fiscal year 2019. 
			Some $300 million in annual "pre-tax run-rate cost synergies" are 
			expected by 2020, the company said. 
			 
			The medical device sector has seen several major deals in recent 
			years, in response to a widespread slowdown in revenue growth, 
			consolidation among healthcare providers, and increased pressure 
			from healthcare payers to hold down treatment costs. In January, 
			Abbott Laboratories acquired rival St. Jude Medical Inc for $25 
			billion, while in 2015 Medtronic Plc bought Covidien Plc for around 
			$49.9 billion, and Zimmer Holdings Inc merged with Biomet Inc for 
			$13.4 billion, creating Zimmer Biomet Holdings Inc. 
			
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			"We expect that this deal will cause others in the space to take a 
			step back and ask themselves if there is an opportunity to do 
			another large transaction and should we be acting upon it," Forlenza 
			said. 
			 
			Becton Dickinson and Bard said they expected their deal to close in 
			the fall of 2017, subject to regulatory and shareholder approvals. 
			 
			Perella Weinberg Partners LP and Citigroup Inc acted as financial 
			advisers, and Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP was legal 
			adviser to Becton Dickinson. Goldman Sachs Group Inc was financial 
			adviser and Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz was legal adviser to 
			Bard. 
			 
			(Reporting by Carl O'Donnell and Jonathan Spicer in New York; 
			Editing by David Gregorio and Mary Milliken) 
			[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
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