Bayer, Monsanto start
$2.5 billion asset sale to get merger clearance: sources
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[March 09, 2017]
FRANKFURT
(Reuters) - German drug and crop chemical maker Bayer and U.S. seeds
company Monsanto are launching asset sales worth roughly $2.5 billion as
they seek regulatory clearance for their $66 billion merger, people
close to the matter said.
To kick off an auction process, Bayer's advisors will send out
information packages next week to prospective bidders for the
businesses, which have been divided into three bundles of assets, the
people said.
Bayer and Monsanto have said in the past that they expect to divest
activities with combined sales of up to $1.6 billion.
While it could not be learned what businesses will be put on the auction
block, antitrust and industry experts expect Bayer to potentially divest
soybean, cotton and canola seed assets as well as LibertyLink-branded
crops that are resistant to its glufosinate herbicide, an important
alternative to Monsanto's Roundup Ready seeds.
Overall, regulatory hurdles to the deal are seen as manageable because
Bayer's main business in agriculture is pesticides while Monsanto's
focus is on genetically modified seeds.
Bayer said last month that it was on track to clear all regulatory
hurdles for the takeover by year-end, including a likely in-depth
investigation by the European Union's competition regulators.
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The logo of Bayer AG is pictured at the Bayer Healthcare subgroup
production plant in Wuppertal, Germany February 24, 2014.
REUTERS/Ina Fassbender/File Photo
Peer
BASF has been touted as a potential buyer of some of the assets after abstaining
from a wave of consolidation in the agrochemicals industry, which also saw Dow
and DuPont merging and ChemChina buying Syngenta.
The assets, which comprise sets of different active ingredients in several
global regions, will also be shopped to large private equity groups, which may,
however, struggle to bid competitively against players in the agricultural
supplies market, the sources said.
"Transaction security is more important than price," one of the people close to
Bayer said.
Bayer and Monsanto declined to comment.
(Reporting by Arno Schuetze and Gregory Roumeliotis, additional reporting by
Ludwig Burger; Editing by Harro ten Wolde)
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